7.3: Iconicity
- Page ID
- 199322
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An icon is widely defined as a celebrity, character or item whose exposure constitutes a defining characteristic of a society or era. Oxford Dictionary defines an icon as "a person or thing regarded as a representative symbol or as worthy of veneration ("Icon" def. 2). Betty White is a U.S. cultural icon, the Eiffel Tower is iconic of France, and the Statue of Liberty is strongly associated with the United States by people all over the world. Basically, some images are so strongly associated with places, feelings, and ideas that the image becomes representative of those places, feelings and ideas.

Messaris explains how iconicity persuades in his book, Visual Persuasion: The Role of Images in Advertising: "When we look at the real world that surrounds us, the sights we see do not register in our brains as neutral, value-free data. Rather, each visual feature, from the smallest nuances of a people's facial expressions to the overall physical appearance of people and places, can come with a wealth of emotional associations. Images can...call forth "preprogrammed" emotional responses" (Messaris xiii). More loosely defined, iconic means representative. Again, certain images come to represent ideas, feelings, places, etc. Icons are often used in persuasion to call forth those ideas, feelings, and sense of place.
"If there is one property that most clearly distinguishes pictures from language and other modes of communication, that property is iconicity” (Messaris 3). In marketing, visual icons are used to distinguish brands. One cannot see the green, two-tailed mermaid logo and not think of Starbucks. The golden arches are iconic of McDonald's, the red-and-white bullseye is strongly associated with Target, and the white apple silhouette is iconic of Apple. These icons conjure strong associations, ideas, and feelings with or about the companies they represent. The "Rosie the Riveter" image above is iconic of female empowerment, a "can-do" attitude, and the World War II era.