‘An uncompromising handbook of theory and action … This visually inventive pocketbook is a vital manual of resistance to the manipulative fundamentalism of the contemporary marketplace. Every graphic designer with a conscience should read it, weigh up its findings, heed its call to rethink, and find ways to apply its life-affirming insights.’
Rick Poynor Eye Magazine
‘Undisciplined voices are needed to shout out against the hype and tyranny of branding. In this provocative book, more bricolage than treatise, Grant and Vodeb speak with passion and humor against branding’s version of fake authenticity that reduces identity to micro difference within a hegemonic frame of conformity to commodification. They remind us that identity also means “identify with”, as in solidarity based on commonality-in-difference against the forces of defuturing.’
Anne-Marie Willis Studio at the Edge of the World
‘The book is reminiscent of Marshall McLuhan and Quentin Fiore’s The Medium is the Massage, cautioning against a kind of mind (and soul) control… and brings some of those pre-branding, pre-digital ideas to the 21st century.’
Steven Heller Printmag.com
‘Jason Grant and Oliver Vodeb deliver a forensic take-down of contemporary branding practise … a welcome riposte to the guff that accompanies most branding rhetoric.’
Adrian Shaughnessy Design Observer
‘As we grapple with the concepts and tools of 21st century communications, What is Post-Branding? arrives as a key to the crisis of imagination in which it seems easier to imagine the end of nature than the fundamental system and technological changes needed to shift onto a path of real sustainability. It invites a bright future of infinite potential built on collaborative communications as an antidote to corporate competition’s bleak zero sum branding game.’
Mike Townsley Communications Director, Greenpeace International
‘Rarely do designers fully understand the proper social, cultural and political significance of branding. This book is the exception – it is a critical, extremely witty and creatively produced antidote to branding’s hype. It is a guide through the minefield of mass communication and identity design. In a time that is truly disorientating for both creatives and the general public, What is Post-Branding? should be read, not just by anyone interested in the subject, but everyone who is concerned about where we are heading as a society, and about how we can stay human.’
Jonathan Barnbrook Barnbrook Design / VirusFonts