Saturday, June 30, 2012

Outdoor Hour Challenge Blog Carnival - June Newsletter Edition

OHC Blog Carnival Does it feel like summer in your part of the world? We have had a few hot days but for the most part it has been unseasonably cool. The garden is loving the little bit cooler weather and I have enjoyed getting out to see what is new each day.

I hope you enjoy the latest edition of the Outdoor Hour Challenge Blog Carnival. I will announce the winner of the Your Backyard-Monarch Butterfly DVD in tomorrow's newsletter post.




You can read our family's posts for the month:
Chasing Yellow Jackets - Our Summer Nature Study Begins
Summer Tree Study - Following Up On Cottonwoods

Sunflower with Bee and Pollen June 2012 button
Our garden bee in the sunflower pollen.

Yellow Jackets and Mud Daubers
  • Kristin from Broom and Crown writes about their: Paper Wasp Study.  They took advantage of the opportunity to observe a paper wasp nest that presented itself..observations and comparisons with little ones = a perfect nature study.
  • Cristy from Crafty Cristy shares their Studying Yellow Jackets in Summer entry with carnival readers.  She shows us how she does her "stealth nature study" so her children don't think they are doing "school" over the summer. Excellent way to do nature study over the summer break!
  • Makita from Academia Celestia share two entries with carnival readers: Mud Daubers and Fabulous Fern Study. They happened to have some mud daubers and their nest to observe closely...perfect timing! 

Tiger Swallowtail button
Tiger Swallowtail in our Butterfly Garden

Beach Nature Study
  • Heidi from Home Schoolroom joins the carnival for the first time this month with her family's entry: Nature Study-Exploring the Beach. This is a must read for everyone this time. She has shown how to apply so many of the suggestions from the June Newsletter for beach nature study. Excellent entry!
  • Kim from A Child's Garden: Beaches, Beaches, Everywhere - Kim and her family have put together some ideas for further study at the beach. If you are using the June Newsletter and focusing on beaches, you will want to read her entry. 
Potpourri
  • Wendy from Loving Learning shares their entry: A Little Fresh Air and Lion's Teeth. Get a glimpse into their South African nature study using the Outdoor Hour Challenge.
  • Shirley Ann from Under An English Sky shares their First Day of Summer entry: Meadow Grass.  I thoroughly enjoyed reading about their outing and the observations they made in their meadow of grasses.She also submits a review of the book they used during their Meadow Grass study: Living Book-Nature Adventures.
  • Sara from Garner Goings On has documented their Black Tiger Swallowtail story in this entry for the carnival: Captivating Caterpillars Become Flowers That Fly and All But Sing. Amazing!
  • Jen from Snowfall Academy shares their nature study from France in this entry to the carnival: Nature Study with Flowers. Their family has used the Handbook of Nature Study to guide a gentle focus on flowers and they have learned lots! 
  • Janet at Across the Page has submitted this entry to the carnival: Cornell Hawks-An 11 Year Old's View. What a wonderful way to follow up all that bird nature study that this family started months ago with the livecam at Cornell watching the Red-tailed hawk nest! Excellent and inspirational!
  • Tiffany at a Faithful Heart writes up and shares their Nature Study - Chicks and Chickens using the Handbook of Nature Study.
  • It looks like Tricia from Hodgepodge has taken my Summer Photo Challenge! Here is their Hodgepodge Gardens entry showing their beginnings of a full summer of nature study using the OHC. I think this is the most colorful entry ever!
  • Tricia also has shared their Simple Summer Nature Study post with carnival readers.  What a delightful collection of their late June nature study topics and the promise of beautiful butterflies to come!
  • Ann from Harvest Moon by Hand writes about their Fish Study. What a beautiful place to learn about such an interesting topic.
  • Kristin from Broom and Crown submits their Wilderness Park Visit which is an early start to the summer pond study with the Outdoor Hour Challenge. Check out their turtles and birds!
Don't forget to share your blog entries with the Outdoor Hour Challenge Blog Carnival. All entries done in July are eligible for the next edition. The deadline for entries is 7/30/12 and you can send them directly to me: harmonyfinearts@yahoo.com or submit them at the blog carnival site (link on the sidebar of my blog).

Also, the July Newsletter link will be in tomorrow's blog entry so make sure you are subscribed so you can download your copy as soon as possible. There are lots of great ideas for nature study, some printable pages for you to use in your nature study, and several articles contributed by Outdoor Hour Challenge participants.



OHC Bundle ButtonMore Nature Study Bundle Button - Square

Have you seen the new bundle? If you are new to the Outdoor Hour Challenge my Four Seasons Bundle and my More Nature Study Bundle will give you lots to work with! Click the buttons and read more about these specially discounted bundles of nature study ebooks.

If you haven't taken the survey here on my blog yet, I would appreciate your input. Thank you for your time!
Handbook of Nature Study Survey



Nico in Soho

Nothing to wear and need to be glam? The usual same old same old from the high street chain stores just don't cut it anymore. Well you are in luck! In the heart of Soho is Nico Didonna, who creates exquisite conceptual clothes, refined and beautifuly tailored.
Yesterday a friend was picking up a couple of new outfits from Nico's latest collection. Perfectly tailored, one dress could even be worn eight different ways. Absolutely stunning! Even better, the price tag wasn't!!
Why would you ever go back to the high street same old.

Flynn Sails With Universal-International --- Part One

Among the unexpected to show up on Region 2 Blu-Ray comes Against All Flags, a costume actioner Errol Flynn did for Universal-International shortly before truest career plummet began. Did U-I maintain standing sets for repeated pirate forays their contract and guest players took? Certainly these had polish, if not lasting value, of Warner, or even Fox, sailings. I watched Flags close for economies, there in abundance, but not once does it openly cheat, as pretender sword pics oft-would. Errol looks surprisingly preserved as well --- did he behave in hopes of continued Uni work and more percentage pay like Alan Ladd, Jim Stewart, and Tyrone Power were getting?

So Far as Errol Figured, Those Scars on His Back Were Ones Slave-Driving Warner Bros. Left

Flynn was represented by MCA agent Lew Wasserman, lately responsible for getting Stewart 50% of profit flowing from Universal's Winchester'73, a deal said to have yielded upwards of $600K to the actor. Soon enough came other name players beating at the percentage door. The money seems to have been real enough, at least for some. Tyrone Power allegedly took $750,000 by The Mississippi Gambler's theatrical wind-up. Alan Ladd was satisfied enough with Desert Legion to stay on for Saskatchewan. Wasserman by 1951 represented power beyond that of most studio heads. He had succeeded in re-negotiating Errol Flynn's Warner pact to allow outside pictures, one per annum, Against All Flags to be the star's first go at profit participantion with Universal.

Errol at Maureen's Mercy --- She'd Write Later That He Was a Pleasure To Work With

Flynn Rehearses Swordplay on Universal Soundstage
Flynn's doubled a lot in Flags --- Blu-Ray betrays such in action not as noticeable before. Were 35mm Tech prints so sharp as HD projection? I've gone long enough with digital to have near-forgot. You're way past surfeit of this stuff when sword scuffles become more a matter of spotting stand-ins than what action is performed. Flynn was good with medium-shot dueling ... sometimes he'd get too frisky, or in cups, so opponents got cut. Didn't I read where young Chris Lee spilled blood a few years later on TV's Errol Flynn Theatre wherein he guested?


There is Maureen O'Hara as a lady pirate, loath to kiss Errol unless it's her idea. Was she any sort of feminist role model ... ever? ... or did too many pairings with (and spankings from) John Wayne scotch O'Hara placement among icons for gender equality? She's actually good with a sword, near so as Flynn. Small wonder Universal touted their teaming as one that had to happen. Blu-Ray supports O'Hara's rep as a (no, the) Queen Of Technicolor. With lards of damaging make-up they used to put on stars, especially for Tech work, I'm surprised her complexion stood up to years of such application (and maybe it didn't, as unretouched stills of any Gold Age femme star are hard to come by).


Errol Flynn's Most Dependable Companions --- A Good Book
 and a Faithful Dog
George Sherman directed Against All Flags. He knew action from herding horseflesh and cowboys mounted thereon. I'll bet he finished this under budget. Sherman's is effort we call "workmanlike," by no means a pejorative, as age and further exploration of modest output makes me better appreciate pro jobs done by journeymen still awaiting their due. Universal saw Against All Flagshighlighting a '52 season --- this was a money show and they'd spend (comparative) lots to put it equal as possible with period-dressed Metro, the latter's Stewart Granger series by far richest of adventure writ with feathers. Just having Flynn got AAF in houses less receptive to Uni programmers Tony Curtis or Jeff Chandler top-lined. It was sure-fires like Flynn, Stewart, Ladd, and Power that gave U-I revenue to develop in-house Curtis, Rock Hudson, and others who'd come to represent stardom for 50's youth, and indeed, it was company quest for unassailable A's that made them roll over for big-name % demands.

Among Universal's Junior Varsity Pirate Crew --- Philip Friend and Yvonne De Carlo

Universal's were otherwise the dime comic books of pirate movies. Looking at one was same as watching six for as much as they varied. Star potential was tested, option pick-ups determined by how (mostly) kid/teens responded to new faces. Some clicked, like Yvonne De Carlo as titular Buccaneer's Girl in 1950, but opposite number Philip Friend, "introduced" here (despite being in pics ten years), didn't registerand walked the plank. Such product serviced what was left of a movie-mad public, down principally to youth, enough of them fortunately there to generate profits so long as Universal kept costs at bay. Technicolor was a common thread through postwar U-I actioners, westerns and costume piece alike. Whatever deficiency lay in script or direction saw compensation for being at least pretty to look at. With proper DVD delivery, many still are.

Friday, June 29, 2012

'If not duffers won't drown'

We are pleased to announce that the papers of Roger E  C Altounyan (1922-1987) have now been catalogued and are available for research.

Roger Altounyan was a member of a distinguished Anglo-Armenian medical dynasty. His grandfather, born in Turkey, undertook medical education in the USA and Germany in the early twentieth century and founded a hospital in Aleppo, Syria. His son Ernest took over the running of this hospital and after qualifying in medicine Roger Altounyan worked there for a few years until changes in the political situation meant the family had to leave in 1955. There is a little material about this family background in PP/RCA/A.1/1.

During his childhood, the family enjoyed a sailing holiday in the Lake District with Arthur Ransome, a friend of his mother's family, an association which led Ransome to write the much-loved children's classic Swallows and Amazons and its sequels, in which Ship's Boy Roger Walker was based on Roger Altounyan, who remained very keen on small boat sailing in later life.

After education at Abbotsholme School (where he suffered from severe eczema), Roger Altounyan returned to Aleppo in 1939, and on the outbreak of World War II joined the RAF. He became a bomber pilot with particular responsibility for the development of low-level night flying procedures, and received the Air Force Cross in 1945. He then studied medicine at Cambridge and the Middlesex Hospital, qualifying in 1952, when he returned to Aleppo. After the family had to leave, he returned to England and found a job working for Bengers, a subsidiary of Fisons Pharmaceuticals and subsequently absorbed by them. He also undertook clinics in the chest departments of Manchester hospitals.


Altounyan had developed asthma while a medical student and was particularly interested in finding a remedy.  In order to examine the effects of various substances in a human subject he would induce attacks in order to record his response. The collection includes a substantial series of spirometer readings he took of these experiments using the equipment illustrated, recently part on an exhibition at the US National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, Maryland on the history of asthma.
This led to the development of Intal (disodium cromoglycate) from a Middle Eastern folk remedy, Khellin. Although Altounyan and his colleagues were told to stop pursuing the line of research they had begun, they continued this in secret with such success that Intal was passed through the necessary processes of approval and put into production with unusual alacrity.
This collection is particularly strong on Altounyan's work on Intal and other products during his period at Fisons; it also reflects his increasing international profile, in a series of files relating to talks and lectures given at a geographically broad range of venues. There is also a substantial amount of correspondence with colleagues as well as some material on working at Fisons generally.

His daring yet careful and responsible risk-taking in the interests of advancing understanding of asthma and its relief recalls the famous telegram that opens the action of Swallows and Amazons: 'Better drowned than duffers if not duffers won't drown'.

OHC More Nature Study Book #4 - Mouse Study

Summer Mammal Button

More Nature Study Book #4
Summer Mammal Study - Mouse

Inside Preparation Work:
Outdoor Hour Time:
  • This is one of those challenges that is hard to plan ahead of time for direct observation of the topic. If you have access to a real mouse to observe, use the suggestions for the lesson in the Handbook of Nature Study.
  • If you don’t have access to a mouse, use your outdoor time to observe any mammal and compare it using information you know about a mouse: teeth, feet, tail, color, size, behavior, diet.
  • Remember: You are always successful in the Outdoor Hour Challenge if you take time to be outside with your children for a few minutes each week. You can use your outdoor time this week to sit on a blanket in the shade, read about mice, and then make a few notes in your nature journal. Snacks are always welcome during the Outdoor Hour Challenge as well and you can see OHC Challenge #10 for more ideas for a nature study/picnic activity.
Follow-Up Activity:
  • Complete a nature journal entry with any information you learned from your mouse study. You can sketch any signs of mice that you observed in your yard like tracks, scat, or a mouse hole. You can also click this link, click and print the image of the house mouse to include in your notebook: Nature.CA—House Mouse or you can color the page for the Whitefooted Mouse in this ebook.
  • If you observed any other mammal and would like to follow-up with more nature study, you can check the list of previous mammal Outdoor Hour Challenges for more information using the Handbook of Nature Study. You may wish to use the free Mammal Notebook Page available on my blog.
  • Advanced Study: Research the Rodentia order and the Muridae family. Record your results in your nature journal.
Additional Links:
More Helpful Links:
Owl Pellet Bone Chart (free printable)

More Nature Study #4 Cover image
If you haven't taken my Handbook of Nature Study survey yet, I would greatly appreciate a few minutes of your time to give your thoughts on the direction of the Outdoor Hour Challenge. Thank you for your input!

Handbook of Nature Study Survey


All the summer challenges for 2012 are included in the new More Nature Study Book #4 Summer Sizzle ebook. The challenges in the ebook are the same challenges that will post every Friday here on my blog. If you want to follow along with notebook pages and coloring pages, click over and learn more about the ebook.



 

Last Tuesdays

Discover one of London's hidden gems and enjoy an evening with a difference on the last Tuesday of every month.
In the magnificent art deco building of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) a variety of special events are offered to the public, exhibitions, film screenings, book signings and building tours. Always with a different theme. June was play. July will be celebration and spectacle.
When you are finished, browse the bookshop, have a coffee in the cafe or better still stop for dinner in the magnificent dining room with it's superb art deco features.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Handbook of Nature Study - Survey

Outdoor Hour button
Most of us are working our way through the summer challenges and enjoying the delights of this season.

As the summer goes by, I need to start thinking about which direction the Outdoor Hour Challenge is going to take in September.

I decided that a survey of my readers and participants of the Outdoor Hour Challenge might just help me make some decisions about the future course of nature study here on my blog.

Please take a few minutes to respond to the simple survey I have created. Most of the questions are multiple choice but there are spaces available for you to elaborate if you have some ideas to share or extra comments. If you need a response from me, the very last box in the survey would be a good place to comment and leave me a way to get in contact with you (email address).

Please be sure that I will keep all responses confidential and I would love to hear honest opinions from everyone. You will need to click the link below to go to the survey form on Google Docs.


Thank you to all who participate in the survey.

Lecture Announcement - Sustaining Plague Mortality in Late Medieval Milan

The Wellcome Library and the National Endowment for the Humanities 2012 Summer Seminar, ‘Health and Disease in the Middle Ages’, are delighted to announce details of a lecture by Ann G. Carmichael, M.D., Ph.D. (Associate Professor emerita, Indiana University, Bloomington, USA):

Sustaining Plague Mortality in Late Medieval Milan: Environmental Patterns and Non-Plague Causes of Death

3pm-4pm, 20th July 2012
Wellcome Collection Conference Centre
183 Euston Road
London
NW1 2BE

The lecture is free to attend. To reserve a space, please email Ross MacFarlane (r.macfarlane@wellcome.ac.uk)

Abstract: This talk will parse diagnoses of cause of death in Milan during the Sforza era, 1450-1524, using surviving urban mortality registers. With some lacunae, records that span three generations provide extraordinary detail for this time period. Diagnoses were recorded by the dukes’ Health Office, from oral and written reports made by physicians and surgeons in the metropolitan zone. Partial records survive from three severe plagues, from some epidemics of mixed plague and general crisis mortality, and from a few years of distinctively non-plague epidemic mortality. In all years, reporting diagnosticians were required to provide explanation for the death of every individual over age two years at death, if only to differentiate suspected cases of plague from non-suspect mortality. Every victim was further named and identified by parish, sector of the city, or other geographical locator. Often the physicians and surgeons offer far more detail than this minimum. From aggregate analysis of these records (a set of over 140,000 individual cases), the talk will explore questions that historians must now confront, now that we know late medieval plagues included deaths from Yersinia pestis. Plagues were multi-year crises, thus what human actions and environments helped to sustain plague mortality? What larger temporal and spatial patterns can we discern in the cases that these diagnosticians identified as plague deaths? What social and physical aspects of the natural and built environments were associated with higher plague mortality? In what ways did non-plague epidemics differ?

Image: From Fasciculus medicine, 1495 (EPB Incanabula 3.e.13 (SR))

New European Library portal goes live



The European Library's new portal has gone live, with this video showcasing its best features.
Designed to meet the needs of the research community worldwide, you can now cross-search nearly 10 million digital items from 48 national and research libraries across Europe.
We’ve bloggedbeforeabout the Wellcome Library’s contributions to Europeana Libraries. We make our material available in the European Library through the Europeana Libraries project. In fact, our collections make an appearance in the new video at 1m 10s, Orthopaedic exercises for curvature of the spine, from Wellcome Film, and at 1m 26s, Engraving of a flea (from Micrographia), from Wellcome Images.

British Music Past and Future

After my climb on the O2 roof last weekend, I took in the British Music Experience (BME) at O2. Everything you ever wanted to know about British Music is here. Show cases displaying clothing, memorabilia, sheet music, you name it, it is here. Then there are the giant video screens showing singers and bands from every decade.

It's not just for watching, you can get involved, like the girl above learning dance routines.


Just before you exit you get a glimpse of the future. Hologram concerts. This future is happening very soon. I read in the paper the other day that a Jimi Hendrix concert is planned very soon. He will be there as a hologram.

Guest Post: Bad Vibrations: The History of the Idea of Music as a Cause of Disease

Dr James Kennaway is a Wellcome Trust Research Fellow at the Centre for the History of Medicine and Disease at Durham University. Here he describes the development of fears that music can make listeners ill.


Everyone has songs they can’t stand, and some of us are even tone deaf, but most people think of music as a very positive and healthy part of their lives. In the context of music therapy, it is even supposed to have medical benefits. However, my own research has revealed a darker side of music. For the last two hundred years many doctors, critics and writers have suggested that certain kinds of music have the power to cause neurosis, madness, hysteria and even death. My new book Bad Vibrations: The History of the Idea of Music as a Cause of Disease outlines the development of theories that music can be seriously bad for your health, drawing on many happy hours spent looking at the books and archives held at the Wellcome Library.

By the eighteenth century, music was increasingly regarded less as an expression of cosmic harmony and more as a form of nervous stimulation. And like other dangerous modern stimulants such as novels or coffee, music, it was believed, could be the root of a whole range of illnesses. The glass harmonica, which works on the same principle as rubbing a finger around a glass of water, and makes a similarly eerie sound, was regarded as especially dangerous. Its popularity was such that Mozart composed for the instrument, but the idea that the instrument caused dangerous tension in the nerves was commonplace. In 1786 the German composer and harmonica player Karl Leopold Röllig suggested it could ‘make women faint; send a dog into convulsions, make a sleeping girl wake screaming through a chord of the diminished seventh, and even cause the death of one very young’. There are accounts of the instrument being banned by physicians who cited possible ill effects including prolonged shaking of the nerves, tremors in the muscles, fainting, cramps, swelling, paralysis of the limbs’ and seeing ghosts.

The first serious medical panic about a specific composer’s work related to Richard Wagner. His patron King Ludwig II of Bavaria, who would later succumb to a peculiarly Wagnerian form of madness, drowning with his psychiatrist in mysterious circumstances, reportedly passed out during a performance. Even more dramatically, the first singer to perform the role of Tristan, Ludwig Schnorr von Carolsfeld, died in a Tristan delirium at the age of 29. Von Carolsfeld was not the only person to apparently ‘die’ of Tristan. Aloys Ander, who had played Tristan in the abortive Vienna production, died insane in 1865. Such was the atmosphere of elicit eroticism surrounding Wagner’s work that the French writer Léon Bloy suggested that Wagner’s innovative idea of turning off the lights in the theatre was in order to allow secret groping in the audience. The American psychologist Aldred Warthin at the University of Michigan claimed that he had been informed by colleagues of quasi-hypnotised listeners being brought to orgasm by the composer’s music, but reported that he could not replicate this result in his experiments. He did however suggest that such Wagnerian trances ‘may be attended by danger’. ‘The symptoms of collapse developed at times’, he wrote, and ‘the accompanying emotional shock, might be increased beyond the point of safety’.

Other observers suggested that the sexual power of Wagner’s music could be related to what was seen as the medical condition of homosexuality. The famous sexologist Richard von Krafft-Ebing, whose papers are held at the Wellcome Library, interviewed several men who said that listening to Wagner had made them homosexual. And in his 1907 book The Intersexes Xavier Mayne included a questionnaire in order for the reader to discover if he was ‘at all Uranian?’, a euphemism for homosexuality. Along with more obvious questions such as, ‘Do you feel at ease in the dress of the opposite sex?’, it asked, ‘Are you particularly fond of Wagner?’ Since it was widely believed that homosexuals, despite their innate musicality, were unable to whistle, it also asked, ‘Do you whistle well, and naturally like to do so?’

In general, however, the warnings about the effect of sexual excitement were generally aimed at women. As I learned from the Wellcome Library’s collection of old psychiatric and gynaecological textbooks, physicians argued that even piano lessons could have disastrous consequences for female health. In 1900 the doctor J. Herbert Dixon wrote that it could lead to ‘pronounced neurasthenia’ with symptoms such as ‘headaches, neuralgia, nervous twitchings, hysteria, melancholia and madness’. The consequences of modern musical over-stimulation for female fertility were a common topic of debate during the final decades of the nineteenth century. Some gynaecologists argued that musical stimulation could over-excite the female reproductive system, causing premature puberty and excessive menstruation. The Argentine psychiatrist José Ingegnerios described a case in 1907 that demonstrated, he believed, that female ‘morbid musical feeling’ peaked when the women concerned were menstruating. He also reported the case of a ‘melo-sexual’ young woman who achieved ‘complete sexual satisfaction’ from playing the piano, which had led to her ‘sexual neurasthenia’.

In the poisonous atmosphere of the Weimar Republic, anti-Semitism came to play an increasing role in attacks on ‘sick’ music. The Nazi takeover of power in 1933 was regarded by many critics of ‘degenerate music’ as the basis for a restoration of musical ‘health’ and liberation from the ‘bacillus of putrefaction’ of bad music. To this end, all foreign music sold in Germany had to be approved by the Reich Ministry for Propaganda. The combination of racism, reaction and misused psychiatry in music that had developed through the Weimar Republic and into the Nazi era reached a peak with the Degenerate Music exhibition in Düsseldorf in 1938. Musical ‘hygiene’ had become state policy, leading to thousands being silenced, exiled or murdered.

Race has played a major role in most medical panics about music since ragtime. Already in 1904, an American critic commented on the popularity of the argument that the ‘peculiar accent and syncopated time’ of ragtime could have a ‘disintegrating effect on nerve tissue and a similar result upon moral integrity’. The association of ragtime with nervousness was such that a whole sub-genre came into being, the ‘nervous rag’, including examples like Paul J. Know’s ‘Every Darkey has a Nervous Spell’ (a song about stealing chickens). When jazz hit the mainstream after the First World War there was a wave of anxiety about its effects on the body, sometimes involving the authorities on public health grounds. The Health Commissioner of Milwaukee, Dr George C. Ruhland opined that jazz excited ‘the nervous system until a veritable hysterical frenzy is reached. It is easy to see that such a frenzy is damaging to the nervous system and will undermine the health in no time’. The orchestra leader at Napa asylum near San Francisco stated that, ‘from my own knowledge that about fifty percent of our young boys and girls from the age 16 to 25 that land in the insane asylum theses days are jazz-crazy dope fiends and public dance hall patrons’.

After the Second World War, the influence of Pavlov’s concept of the conditioned reflex combined with an atmosphere of Cold War paranoia, led to a panic about the supposed ability of music to ‘brainwash’ listeners, causing mental illness and political trouble. The term "brainwashing" emerged during the Korean War, when it was feared that Communists had developed powerful forms of mind control. The CIA then promoted the term to explain the behaviour of American POWs and began its own research into such techniques, some of which used music. The prominent English psychiatrist William Sargant, whose papers are kept in the Wellcome Library, advanced a Pavlovian account of musical manipulations in his book Battle for the Mind, which portrayed rock ‘n’ roll as a dangerous threat to the mind. As I discovered from Sargant’s own copy of the magazine held at the Wellcome Library, he later argued in an interview in Newsweek that Patty Hearst had been turned from an heiress kidnap victim into a politically motivated armed robber by loud rock music.

In America right-wing evangelical Christians have used the idea of rock music as a sinister form of brainwashing to argue that it was literally a Communist plot. Author David Noebel argued that, ‘The Communist scientists and psycho-politicians have devised a method of combining music, hypnotism and Pavlovianism to nerve-jam the children of our nation without our leaders, teachers or parents being aware of its shocking implications’. ‘If [such] scientific programmes [were] not exposed,’ he warned, ‘degenerated Americans will indeed raise the Communist flag over their own nation’. He provided ingenious if paradoxical reasoning to explain why Communist states themselves banned rock music although it was their own sinister invention - it just showed that they know how dangerous it really was! Along with well-worn themes relating to sex and drugs, Noebel also brought to light a less common aspect of music’s dangers – the threat posed to plants. He reported an experiment conducted by Mrs Dorothy Retallack of Denver that demonstrated, he claimed, that avant-garde classical music made plants wilt and Led Zeppelin made them die.

The American anxiety about musical brainwashing that developed in the context of the Cold War in the 1950s was in part shifted onto another supposed worldwide conspiracy during the Reagan era - Satanism. During the 1980s and 1990s a full-scale moral panic swept the country, linking the pseudo-science of brainwashing, the literal belief in a supernatural satanic threat and the musical genre of heavy metal. A wide range of books with titles like The Devil’s Disciples, and (my personal favourite) Hit Rock’s Bottom accused certain bands of brainwashing innocent American teenagers with subliminal messages which turned them towards devil worship, sexual immorality, murder and suicide.

One apparent element of this diabolical plot was the use of so-called ‘Backmasking’, hidden messages in the music that only made sense to the conscious mind when played forwards, which, it was argued, could influence listeners subliminally and thus damaging their mental health. Bands like The Beatles popularised backmasking techniques pioneered by 1950s’ musique concrète composers, sparking conspiracy theories relating to what the messages really said. Self-proclaimed experts often disagreed about what dangerous message was hidden in the music, and exposed themselves to ridicule with their analysis of backmasking tracks. One well-known preacher in Ohio publicly burned a recording of the theme tune to the TV series Mr. Ed (which featured a talking horse) because he said it had ‘Someone sing this song for Satan’ backwards.

Just as the novel became more respectable as the cinema became the bugbear in the early twentieth century, and the cinema was replaced by the ‘video nasty’ in the 1980s only to be replaced in turn by the Internet, so each new musical medium has been viewed by many as especially ‘modern’, immoral and bad for the health. In the last couple of years a new medical/moral panic about the danger of sound has taken the place of backmasking in the public imagination: ‘i-dosing’. The Daily Mail was among the first to hype this potential new moral panic, with an article describing ‘the world of “i-Dosing”, the new craze sweeping the internet in which teenagers used so-called ‘digital drugs’ to change their brains in the same way as real-life narcotics’. I-dosing involves so-called binaural beats, a tone of slightly varying frequencies is played to each ear and the listener can perceive an extra low beat.

More real - and much more worrying - is the deployment of music and sound in warfare. Like waterboarding, the use of music to ‘break’ a prisoner leaves no visible scars that might cause an outrage if they were shown in the media. As early as May 2003 the BBC was reporting that the US army had played Metallica’s ‘Enter Sandman’ and Barney the Dinosaur’s ‘I Love You’ to ‘uncooperative’ detainees at high volume in shipping containers.  It seems that although almost all the panic about music’s effect on health over the past couple of centuries has been disproved, this more modern application of music may be seriously bad for the health after all.

This post is based on a radio programme (available online) based on Dr Kennaway's research.  For more on recurring fears about musical hypnosis and brainwashing, see James Kennaway, 'Musical Hypnosis: Sound and Selfhood from Mesmerism to Brainwashing', Social History of Medicine, (2012) 25(2): 271-289.   (PDF available through open access). Bad Vibrations: The History of the Idea of Music as a Cause of Disease is available now.

Images:
- Dandies at the opera, one of them swooning, overcome with emotion. Coloured etching by I.R. Cruikshank, 1818 (Wellcome Library no. 12030i)
- Richard von Krafft-Ebing. Photogravure. (Wellcome Library no. 13018i)
- William Walters Sargant, identity card, 1947 (PP/WWS/A.19)
- Pierre Schaeffer, early exponent of musique concrète (photograph in Wikimedia Commons)

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Verneuill and the Full Decorative Experience

Illustration: Maurice Pillard Verneuill, 1897.

Some of the most dazzlingly decorative pattern work produced in recent times is that by designer Maurice Pillard Verneuill. From about the end of the nineteenth century and well into the twentieth, Verneuill produced a consistently high standard of decorative work that could be used as both a source for practical application as well as an even richer source of inspiration.

All five of the examples shown in this article were originally published in 1897 and although to all intents and purposes Verneuill's style can be firmly placed within the realms of Art Nouveau, there is always usually much more to the work of a designer than a handy period name in which to place them. In some respects decorative art periods and eras can often be seen as more of a convenient framework in which to coral creative people of their day, rather than being necessarily and entirely accurate. Therefore, many designers can for example be dropped into Gothic, Arts and Crafts, Art Nouveau, Art Deco, Modernism, etc. However, many are placed into these categories when only one facet of their creative style fits the period, most creative people are multi-faceted and have an annoying tendency, at least to writers of coffee table books, of not entirely fitting the mould of the decorative period. Often these annoying extras are conveniently ignored or briefly explained away as a one off anomaly, or even as some form of negative quality within their career. However, this is to ignore the complexity of the individual creative who often brings in design elements from any number of sources including childhood, literature, past and present likes and interests, family, friends, cultural and religious connections, and many more. It is the complexity and the ability through that complexity of not fitting entirely and conveniently into decorative periods that have usually been designated long after the style era has passed, that should be both celebrated and widely acknowledged as the human creative condition.

Illustration: Maurice Pillard Verneuill, 1897.

To see it within a contemporary framework, at some point in the future our own era will have a name attached to it, which will be neatly packaged and designed, leaving no untidy extras. Most of us will be forced to inhabit this style era even though many may well feel that they had little if anything in common with the designation. However, as we may all be long dead by then, we will have little in which to argue otherwise. It does raise the rather complex issue of future generations having a decidedly different view of events as well as individuals and their creative careers. Do we and our descendants forcibly manipulate the past creative world to suit our own agendas and tidy world view, placing everyone within eras such as Art Nouveau, Art Deco, etc.? Every creative person would like to be seen, and probably deserves to be seen as an individual, outside of the constraints of an imposed design era. Unfortunately, that won't happen anytime soon and so we are left with the inexact and often crude decorative style eras imposed by others.

Illustration: Maurice Pillard Verneuill, 1897.

To be fair, to some extent at least it could be said that Verneuill fits well into these imposed decorative eras, particularly with his portfolio work which was meant to be practically applied by designers and companies through a range of disciplines. Therefore, he produced a number of portfolios of work throughout the period of the 1890s and 1900s that clearly followed at least the generalised ideals of Art Nouveau. He was still popular in the 1920s and was by then producing much more Modernist influenced work which appealed to the new post World War I decorative era, what would eventually be classed in the 1960s as Art Deco. However, as already stated, this can only ever be an approximation and there are far too many internal and external factors regarding the individual creative, to make labels either altogether meaningless, or an unhappy approximation.

Illustration: Maurice Pillard Verneuill, 1897.

Although much of the portfolio work that Verneuill produced in 1897 contained pages of either singular or multi-patterned choices, I have chosen five examples that give what appears to be an almost all-encompassing decorative experience. Here Verneuill has allowed the page to become a set in which a number of factors of decoration have been allowed to enter, interestingly inclusive of decoration for three dimensional pieces, ceramics in particular. Although many ceramicists did use Verneuill's work and others to decorate a range of practical and decorative ceramic ware, many of the portfolios gave only flat pattern as examples. Verneuill has interestingly expanded this to include vessels with idealised pattern work. All of which gives these pages in particular an overall feeling not so much depth, which is passed over quite lightly with a superficial perspective, but a genuine depth of pattern that almost luxurious in its rich use of line and colour. 

 Illustration: Maurice Pillard Verneuill, 1897.

In some respects, these pages which to all intents and purposes were meant as a practical and technical tool, have taken on a distinctive appeal all of their own. They give a genuine understanding of why decoration and pattern is so important not only to the decorative artist and designer, but to humanity as a whole. These pages are a celebration by Verneuill of the appeal, passion, even necessity of decoration which is shown to be both timeless and within its time. By this I mean that although Verneuill produced work that was obviously influenced by his own contemporary world, one that was heavily intrigued by the many differing aspects of Art Nouveau, he also incorporated elements of design and decoration that made contacts with not only previous decorative eras, but previous cultures. Creative people rarely limit themselves to their own contemporary era and often gain inspiration from either the physical survivals from the ancient past, or even that daydreamed from ancient cultures and eras. It all adds to the vocabulary of the creative individual and their resulting work, which in turn adds to the full decorative experience. Although Verneuill may not be as well known today as perhaps he should be, these pages must surely give an indication as to the high status he naturally held as a decorative designer.

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