Personal advertisement
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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- | A '''personal advertisement''', sometimes called a '''contact ad''', is a form of [[classified advertising]] in which a person seeks to find another person for friendship, romance, marriage, or sexual activity. In British English, it is commonly known as an advert in a '''lonely hearts column'''. In India, it is a '''dating ad''' or '''matrimonial ad'''. | + | A '''personal advertisement''', sometimes called a '''contact ad''', is a form of [[classified advertising]] in which a person seeks to find another person for [[friendship]], [[romance]], [[marriage]], or [[sexual activity]]. In British English, it is commonly known as an advert in a '''lonely hearts column'''. |
- | The earliest personal ads were placed in newspapers among other classified ads, and typically had matrimony as the objective. As interest in personal ads grew, newspapers provided personals sections specifically for those ads. Later, newspapers and magazines for the sole purpose of personal ads were published. Lonely hearts clubs were organized in the 20th century to provide listings of ads to their fee-paying members. With the advent of the [[Internet]], personal ads began to appear on online sites as well, eventually turning into profiles on dating sites and apps. | + | The earliest personal ads were placed in [[newspaper]]s among other classified ads, and typically had [[matrimony]] as the objective. As interest in personal ads grew, newspapers provided personals sections specifically for those ads. Later, newspapers and magazines for the sole purpose of personal ads were published. Lonely hearts clubs were organized in the 20th century to provide listings of ads to their fee-paying members. With the advent of the [[Internet]], personal ads began to appear on online sites as well, eventually turning into profiles on dating sites and apps. |
Personal ads have been described by a researcher as "a valuable way of finding potential mates for those whose social world has been artificially constrained by contemporary urban life and the demands of modern employment practices". However, personals have also been used by criminals—[[con artist]]s, [[fraud]]sters, and [[Lonely hearts killer|killers]]—to find and lure victims. | Personal ads have been described by a researcher as "a valuable way of finding potential mates for those whose social world has been artificially constrained by contemporary urban life and the demands of modern employment practices". However, personals have also been used by criminals—[[con artist]]s, [[fraud]]sters, and [[Lonely hearts killer|killers]]—to find and lure victims. |
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A personal advertisement, sometimes called a contact ad, is a form of classified advertising in which a person seeks to find another person for friendship, romance, marriage, or sexual activity. In British English, it is commonly known as an advert in a lonely hearts column.
The earliest personal ads were placed in newspapers among other classified ads, and typically had matrimony as the objective. As interest in personal ads grew, newspapers provided personals sections specifically for those ads. Later, newspapers and magazines for the sole purpose of personal ads were published. Lonely hearts clubs were organized in the 20th century to provide listings of ads to their fee-paying members. With the advent of the Internet, personal ads began to appear on online sites as well, eventually turning into profiles on dating sites and apps.
Personal ads have been described by a researcher as "a valuable way of finding potential mates for those whose social world has been artificially constrained by contemporary urban life and the demands of modern employment practices". However, personals have also been used by criminals—con artists, fraudsters, and killers—to find and lure victims.
Public opinion toward personal ads varies over time, from disapproval and suspicion in the 17th and 18th centuries to a patriotic service in the United States during the Civil War and to general public acceptance in modern day.
History
The earliest personal ads in England and the United States were satirical. A London magazine published a satirical marriage ad in 1660, supposedly from a widow urgently in need of "any man that is Able to labour in her Corporation". By 1691, entire catalogs of satirical ads for husbands and wives were published for entertainment. The New-England Courant, by brothers James and Benjamin Franklin, printed a satirical marriage ad on its front page on April 13, 1722, ridiculing those who married for money.
See also