Culture Shock
How joy buzzers, trick chairs, and other prank devices helped manufacture the post-industrial American male
Catalog No. 439: Burlesque Paraphernalia and Side Degree Specialties and Costumes, edited by Gary Groth, Fantagraphics, 240 pages, $22.99
The ostensible purpose of the DeMoulin Patent Lung Tester, a plain-looking box with a nickel-plated mouthpiece and a calibrated dial on its face, was to measure a man's lung capacity. Its real purpose was to measure a man's ability to maintain his composure after being made the butt of a joke. When an unsuspecting mark blew into it, a .32 caliber blank cartridge exploded and a blast of flour hit him squarely in the face.
Along with hundreds of similar devices, the Lung Tester appears in Catalog No. 439: Burlesque Paraphernalia and Side Degree Specialties and Costumes. Originally published in 1930 by DeMoulin Bros. & Co., this strange volume has been newly reprinted by Fantagraphics Books. Like the more iconic Sears, Roebuck and Co. catalog, it illuminates its moment in American history as deftly and instructively as any novelist has ever done.
Today left-leaning progressives insist our consumerist culture is not only trashing the planet but leaving us less happy than earlier generations of Americans. Conservative Christians tell us we cannot find meaning or purpose in mere material abundance but must make God the center of our lives, like our Founding Fathers did. Our shopping orgies and wanton spending habits have purportedly left us broke, isolated, and starving for richer friendships, deeper community ties, a higher degree of civic engagement than Groupon can deliver.
But look at how our supposedly more enlightened forebears created the social connectedness we long for. DeMoulin Bros. & Co. got its start in 1893, when 31-year-old Ed DeMoulin of Greenville, Illinois, began making ceremonial axes for the Modern Woodmen of America, a fraternal benefit organization whose primary purpose was to provide life insurance for its brotherhood. A year later, the organization's leader asked DeMoulin if he had any ideas that might help boost membership.
The initiation rites of long-standing secret societies like the Freemasons and Odd Fellows were elaborate, often solemn affairs. According to John Goldsmith, who maintains a museum devoted to the DeMoulin Brothers, Ed DeMoulin believed that the Modern Woodmen could attract more members by making their initiation rites more entertaining. To this end, Ed devised a gag in which the inductee was commanded to place his hand in what appeared to be a cauldron filled with molten lead but was in fact merely cold water with mercurine powder added to it. He followed up with a bucking, mechanical goat designed to take initiates on a short but wild ride.
The stunts DeMoulin dreamed up weren't just more entertaining than traditional fraternal ceremonies. They were also better suited to the new sensibilities and mores taking root in urban America, replacing hoary aristocratic ritual with an egalitarian wise-guy slapstick that played everyone for a fool at least once. Through joy buzzers, trick cigars, exploding flower bouquets, and skeletons that popped out of altars and squirted water in the eyes of their victims, they made the fraternal initiation rite modern, a burlesque rather than a ceremony. American men flocked to them. After the Modern Woodmen began using the DeMoulins' devices, its membership grew from 40,000 to 600,000.
Although it lacks the panoramic sweep of the Sears catalog, Catalog No. 439 presents an even more arresting vision of freedom's bounty. That's because it's almost entirely populated by meticulously tooled devices, gadgets, and props that employ cutting-edge technologies and craftsmanship to no more practical ends than practical jokes. Inopportunely published mere months after Black Tuesday, in the first awful year of the Great Depression, it is a high-water mark of conspicuous production, a striking testament to how thoroughly America's new industrialized economy had conquered necessity and moved on to apply its immense power to the aggressively inessential. Or at least to that which seemed aggressively inessential at first glance.
In the rural, untamed United States, when there was still gold to mine, buffalo to shoot, or at least fields of sorghum to plow, the opportunities to establish your masculine bona fides were natural and numerous. But the urban men gravitating toward fraternal orders at the turn of the 20th century were much like the urban men who populated Chuck Palahniuk's Fight Club 100 years later. Undermined by comfortable bed sheets and silk-lined vests, they wanted to prove they were just as rough and ready as their less civilized forebears. Mobile, rootless, unsure of what the rapidly changing world had in store for them, they also longed for community, kinship with their fellow travelers, and traditions they could call their own.
While an industrialized economy may have left early-20th-century urbanites with fewer opportunities to display their masculine prowess and develop meaningful bonds with each other, it could also produce that which it had erased—in a more efficient, potent, culturally relevant form. The DeMoulin Bros. catalog provisioned the men of its era with danger and adventure on demand. Initiates were menaced by fake branding irons, electrocuted by teeter-totters, ambushed by collapsing chairs. Instead of breaking wild horses on the plains of Texas, they rode "galloping, rearing, wobbling, kicking" mechanical goats that made broncos look tame by comparison. Instead of blazing trails across the unforgiving Mojave, they conquered electric carpets that delivered "all the woes of the hot desert sands."
Through such artificial means, the fraternal organizations could fabricate tradition, churn out camaraderie, and efficiently instill the values the new cultural era demanded. Instead of promoting "gentility, self-reliance, and restraint," the University of North Carolina–Wilmington historian William D. Moore writes in an introductory essay, these new fraternal orders gave lessons in "physical toughness, humor, and appropriate demeanor under stress" through the comic shocks and torture deployed in their initiation rites. And thus the seemingly inessential wasn't so inessential after all. A Model T could help you navigate the present faster than had ever been possible. The devices the DeMoulin Bros. were manufacturing in the early decades of the 20th century could help you establish the relationships and cultivate the mind-set needed to navigate a tricky, rapidly evolving future.
Contributing Editor Greg Beato writes from San Francisco. A version of this article appeared in The Smart Set.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Good morning again reason!
You know what makes me "less happy than earlier generations of Americans"? Patting down my eight-year old at the airport for bombs and drugs, and patting her down again at school because she might be harboring salty snacks.
While that is a good answer, I would have to say that what makes me "less happy than earlier generations of Americans" are leftie ideologues and religious-right nutjobs that use governmental power to impose their idiotic beliefs on me.
Which lefties? In the USA? Ha!
We Feds don't care what you like or don't like. We will have our way with your 8 year old, and if you resist, you will be imprisoned.
Here's a question for you Paul; what kind of a man knowingly surrenders his own daughter to one of us government workers to be molested, standing by passively even as her private parts are fondled while she screams "Daddy Daddy, please help me!" Punch line: an American man. I speak only to you men when I say you gutless cowards will be lining up to hand over your wives and daughters in our airports, it will happen hundreds of time each day across our USA. You had better start explaining to your children that we government employees are allowed to touch their private parts whenever we want; it will make the whole thing a lot less dramatic.
It does not matter if sexual molestation by our TSA employees causes psychological harm to your children lasting decades into adulthood. We are immune from any and all legal consequences and will not be deterred. If your child is damaged by our screening process, it is very likely because you poisoned your child's mind against the United States government. In such a case we may have your states Child Protective Services consider whether or not you are fit to be parents.
http://youareproperty.blogspot.....h-and.html
I saw this book at the dork shop and passed it right by, because the blindingly huge BURLESQUE PARAPHERNALIA on the cover made it seem like a Whitey 2000 old-tyme-sex-kitsch bachelor-pad display item, not an interesting our-own-alien-culture artifact.
Now I'm mad at it for lying.
I just found out that I can see under the Reason Gear girl's hoodie with my x-ray glasses!
... Hobbit
The Johnson Smith Catalogue ("things you never knew existed")!
Nothing can replace my dear "Whoopie Cushion".
Pretty! This was a really wonderful post..Thanks once again for the push!
toys are for children, when adults play with toys they become children, children have to be taken care of.
i'm sorry being an adult isn't supposed to be fun, time to grow up now and take responsiblity for our own lives.
the progressives have had a plan in place for over a hundred years, encouraging adults to behave as children, to make that behavior socially acceptable is all part of it.
Adults acting like children is not what the progressives want. They want adults dependent on government. Practical jokes allow one to express their individualism and network socially (the underlying theme of this article) these toys do nothing at all to make people dependent on the government.
The way progressives make people dependent on the government is by providing services that should be provided privately such as health care and retirement savings. They also tell certain groups of people that they are victims and in so doing keep them addicted to various welfare programs while at the same time placing blame for these peoples "situation" on a different class of people.
This makes no sense at all. Being personally responsible does not mean that you cannot have fun. If you are not having fun, I would say its because life in America has become so homogenized due to excessive laws and regulations which inhibit economic and personal freedom. Despite this, there is still plenty of room for fun and if you are not having fun, I would suggest visiting a psychiatrist because this is some kind of neurological disorder or you may be suffering from anus constrictus.
The only way to be sure that the quality of the product you are buying online is what you expect of Nike shoes is to be sure that you are purchasing from an authorized dealer that is authorized to sell only authentic Nikes. When you pay for the real deal, the stamp of quality is passed along with it and the manufacturers quality guarantee stands. If you are not sure it is best not to buy impulsively but rather to double check.Another way to be sure that you are getting value for your money and not a cheap knock off is to buy from a larger online store. Selling online is a cut throat business and the key to any online business is repeating business. When selling Nike shoes the online store is depending on your word of mouth for their next sale of shoes since getting a visitor to their site was very expensive to start off with. Online stores protect their repeat business more so as they have more to lose so to speak.
http://www.topgradeshop.com
dhuela
is good
thank u
thank you
http://www.iraqn.com/
http://www.v9f.net/chat
perfect
perfect
perfect
perfect
How about mbt kisumu sandals this one: there are X driving deaths a year- what % of driving deaths (or serious injuries) involve alcohol, or other intoxicating substances? kisumu 2 People are pretty darn good drivers when they are not impaired.
outlet
outlet
outlet
outlet
impairment" that corresponds to a probability nike shox tl3 of an accident. Standard psychomotor tests of impairment do not test driving habits. For instance almost *all* people over the age of 60 are "impaired" in terms of those tests, oakely sunglasses but these people do not have a higher accident rate. Older people develop compensatory driving habits
Thanks
Here's a question for you Paul; what kind of a man knowingly surrenders his own daughter to one of us government workers to be molested, standing by passively even as her private parts are fondled while she screams "Daddy Daddy, please help me!" Punch line: an American man. I speak only to you men when I say you gutless cowards will be lining up to hand over your wives and daughters in our airports, it will happen hundreds of time each day across our USA. You had better start explaining to your children that we government employees are allowed to touch their private parts whenever we want; ???? ????? ??? ???????
it will make the whole thing a lot less dramatic.
You know what makes me "less happy than earlier generations of Americans"? Patting down ???? ????? ???????
???? ????? ???????
my eight-year old at the airport for bombs and drugs, and patting her down again at school because she might be harboring salty snacks.
my eight-year old at the airport for bombs and drugs, and patting her down again at school because she might be harboring salty snacks.