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Pears’ Soap AdvertisementAndrew Pears began making his transparent soap in London in 1789. Starting in the late nineteenth century, it was marketed worldwide as a product symbolizing progress in advancing Europe’s “civilizing mission.” In 1910 the Lever brothers, William and James, bought Pears’s company and sold Pears’ Soap along with their own brands, including Sunlight, Lifebuoy, and Lux. These soaps were made with palm oil from Lever plantations in the Congo and the Solomon Islands. Pears’ Soap is still made today, in India. (© North Wind Picture Archives/Alamy)> PICTURING THE PASTANALYZING THE IMAGE: Which elements or words in this advertisement suggest the Western ideal of “civilization”? Which elements or words are used to describe non-Europeans?CONNECTIONS: How might the English maxim “Cleanliness is next to godliness” relate to this advertisement? How can Pears’ Soap lighten “the white man’s burden” and brighten “the dark corners of the earth”?