Friday, December 21, 2007

'ibsen's favorite pub'?

So these are the things that drive me up a wall. Pop culture's general approximations of foreign cultures. I have had hundreds of discussions with people about how images of cultures, people, and cultural identities are created, and how those images come to mean very different things depending on where you are standing.

If you are a member of the group that is described, you often feel slighted. You see a blunt version of your culture presented as if it was the truth. At the same time, if you are not a member of that group, you have no idea that what you are being presented with is a blunt version. You have nothing to compare it to, and you think it's the truth.

The goal in pop culture is rarely to show anything Norwegian, Swedish, Mexican, Black, or Chinese. The goal is to hint at 'exotic' cultures in ways that will be appealing to an American audience. And, of course, that is perfectly understandable. The audience is American, and the context is commercial. Above anything else, it has to be appealing.

What happens, though, is that you alienate people. And you create stereotypes. You alienate the Swedes, the Blacks, the Spanish, the Mexican, the Chinese, the Japanese, or the Norwegian. The list is endless. And you fall back on stereotypes that ring comfortably true only because they are repeated so often.

This commercial (click on the link or on the youtube box above) has been getting on my nerves for a while. It's not a blatant example. The story is kind of cute. But the inaccuracies still irritate me.

The story is that of a father and a son traveling from the US to their ancestral land of Norway to reconnect with their heritage. The voice over goes like this:

So, I asked my dad where he wanted to go for his 60th birthday. Norway, he said, the land of our ancestors. We drank a pint an Ibsen's favorite pub. We sampled the local fare. We got new sweaters. I feel like yodeling. It was the trip of a lifetime, my dad said, until we went to the hall of records and discovered we were actually Swedish. Two tickets to Stockholm please. Whatever your story is, your Citi-card can help you write it. Citi, let's get it done.

The music sounds Anglosaxon to me, rather than Scandinavian. And the father says he feels like yodeling? That's Switzerland, not Norway. Mountains are right, country is not.

Ibsen's favorite pub? Playwright Henrik Ibsen (1828-1906), a man of some means, if he drank, he probably went to restaurants, not pubs. A pub, again, is an Anglosaxon concept, not a Scandinavian one.

Quaint Hall of Records? Likely computerized these days.

And the final shot, where the father and son buy tickets for Stockholm? It makes absolutely no sense trying to get from Norway to Stockholm on a ship. Just look at a map.

Does it matter? Yes it does. It matters because those who do not know have no right to say that it doesn't. Ignorance may be bliss, but it should not be the general standard.

11 comments:

Petchie75 said...

Ha ha, jag har också sett reklamen och tänkt precis samma sak!!
Hur ofta får man inte kommentaren att "Sweden - that's where you make clocks / good chocolate etc" eller den som gör mig mest vansinning - "du kan ju inte vara svensk, du är ju inte blond" och folk MENAR verkligen det! Även utbildade människor från Europa som borde veta bättre! Stereotypes, anybody??

Lotta K said...

Det som verkligen fick mig att smälla av är den sista scenen, när de köper biljetter och det ser ut som om Stockholm ligger på andra sidan vattnet där...

Fia said...

Hm, det som gjorde mig förargad vad att han lät BESVIKEN då han fick reda på att hans släkt var svensk och inte norsk, LOL.

Lotta K said...

Jo den minen var obetalbar.

Minonda said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Minonda said...

Not to mention that it's kind of absurd that the father has been confused all these years about his family's country of origin. Most Americans of European descent know exactly which country their ancestors came from.

Lotta K said...

Paula, yes. And even if some member of the family had come from Sweden to Norway at some point it gets ridiculous. None of us is "pure" anything.

Anonymous said...

i find your nitpicking about the citibank commercial pretty funny.

if you go to you tube and look at the comments by the norwegians,norwegian americans and friends of norway they acknowledge that while there are a few things wrong with the ad, the fact that norway was the thrust of the ad is what counts.

when i was 20 something in the mid 60's i married a norwegian girl and we moved to oslo where we lived and worked for a couple years and had a son. in those days norwegians seemed to have a national inferiority complex due to the fact that they had been a province of either sweden or denmark for a few hundred years or so. even after they got their independence they were the poor relative and were looked on as such by swedes and danes. the north sea oil seems to have changed those dynamics but still the norwegians love the attention however regardless of the discrepancies.

btw, if you check you tube you will find there are a couple of versions of the ad and in one of the longer ads the son says not only that he feels like yodeling but also asks " do they yodel here?" seems that he might be ignorant but at least curious.

as someone who has loved norway for 45 years or more and thinks of it as my adopted country i get a warm feeling when i see the ad because it showcases norway in pictures and they bring back great memories. who cares what the copy is like when the visuals are of my favorite place in the world.

my nitpicking done, i enjoy your blog and am from the bay area born and bred coincidentally. let me also compliment you on your taste in music. i enjoyed your selections while writing his. ha det bra.

Lisa said...

Thanks for posting this; the commercial is being played again during the bowl games. I too was very excited to see a bit of Scandinavia featured. But it took me about 2 views to be like 'wait a minute, to Stockholm.... from Norge .... on a BOAT?' Maybe they wanted a couple extra weeks bonding time! Even if they were in southern Norway and ferried over to, say, Goteborg first then over land to Stockholm, they wouldn't purchase the actual ticket 'to Stockholm.' ... Maybe they thought they were in Finland?

Lotta K said...

Hi Lisa, I am glad you liked it! I haven't seen the ad this time around, but I'm sure I will. I guess it;s male bonding that makes it fit with sports...

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