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LIVRES

Wonder shows : performing science, magic, and religion in America

Nadis, Fred
New Brunswick : Rutgers University Press, 2005

Imagine a stage full of black cats emitting electrical sparks, a man catching bullets with his teeth, or an evangelist jumping on a transformer to shoot bolts of lightning through his fingertips. These and other wild schemes were part of the repertoire of showmen who traveled from city to city, making presentations that blended science with myth and magic.

In Wonder Shows, Fred Nadis offers a colorful history of these traveling magicians, inventors, popular science lecturers, and other presenters of “miracle science” who revealed science and technology to the public in awe-inspiring fashion. The book provides an innovative synthesis of the history of performance with a wider study of culture, science, and religion from the antebellum period to the present.

It features a lively cast of characters, including electrical “wizards” Nikola Tesla and Thomas Alva Edison, vaudeville performers such as Harry Houdini, mind readers, UFO cultists, and practitioners of New Age science. All of these performers developed strategies for invoking cultural authority to back their visions of science and progress. The pseudo-science in their wonder shows helped promote a romantic worldview that called into question the absolute authority of scientific materialism while reaffirming the importance of human spirituality. Nadis argues that the sensation that these entertainers provided became an antidote to the alienation and dehumanization that accompanied the rise of modern America.

Although most recent defenders of science are prone to reject wonder, considering it an ally of ignorance and superstition, Wonder Shows demonstrates that the public’s passion for magic and meaning is still very much alive. Today, sales continue to be made and allegiances won based on illusions that products are unique, singular, and at best, miraculous. Nadis establishes that contemporary showmen, corporate publicists, advertisers, and popular science lecturers are not that unlike the magicians and mesmerists of years ago.
Imagine a stage full of black cats emitting electrical sparks, a man catching bullets with his teeth, or an evangelist jumping on a transformer to shoot bolts of lightning through his fingertips. These and other wild schemes were part of the repertoire of showmen who traveled from city to city, making presentations that blended science with myth and magic.

In Wonder Shows, Fred Nadis offers a colorful history of these traveling magicians, ...


Cote : 791.097 3 N136w 2005

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LIVRES

American entertainment : a unique history of popular show business

Csida, Joseph ; Csida, June Bundy
New York : Watson-Guptill Publications, 1978


Cote : 790.209 73 C9585 1978

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LIVRES

New York City vaudeville

Slide, Anthony
Charleston, SC : Arcadia, c2006

New York City Vaudeville provides a unique pictorial record of America’s preeminent entertainment medium in the late 1800s through the early 1930s. New York’s Palace Theatre served as the flagship for vaudeville, on which stage every vaudevillian aspired to perform. New York City Vaudeville features photographs of some of the greatest names from the Palace Theatre, including Jack Benny, George Burns and Gracie Allen, Anna Held, the Marx Brothers, and Eva Tanguay, as well as legendary African American performers such as Bill Robinson, Ethel Waters, and Bert Williams. Through the photographs and the capsule biographies, the reader is transported back to a time when vaudeville was the people’s entertainment, with a new bill of fare each week and an ever-changing number of performers with ever-changing styles of presentation. [editor summary]
New York City Vaudeville provides a unique pictorial record of America’s preeminent entertainment medium in the late 1800s through the early 1930s. New York’s Palace Theatre served as the flagship for vaudeville, on which stage every vaudevillian aspired to perform. New York City Vaudeville features photographs of some of the greatest names from the Palace Theatre, including Jack Benny, George Burns and Gracie Allen, Anna Held, the Marx ...


Cote : 792.709 747 S6332n 2006

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ENREGISTREMENTS VIDEO

Vaudeville : a DVD documentary

Stickley, Keith
Always above average entertainment, 2010

The last years of the 19th century through the first two decades of the 20th were an exciting time for live popular entertainment. Audiences flocked to their local Vaudeville theatres to watch an amazing variety of live entertainers.
Luckily many of these great entertainers acts were documented on early motion picture cameras before Vaudeville died out. Some of the acts caught on film include animal acts, strong men, burlesque dancers, human oddities, acrobats, magicians, and even wild west superstar Annie Oakley! Narrations include an overview of the history of Vaudeville theatre as well as commentary and descriptions of many of the acts included. [editor summary]
The last years of the 19th century through the first two decades of the 20th were an exciting time for live popular entertainment. Audiences flocked to their local Vaudeville theatres to watch an amazing variety of live entertainers.
Luckily many of these great entertainers acts were documented on early motion picture cameras before Vaudeville died out. Some of the acts caught on film include animal acts, strong men, burlesque dancers, human ...


Cote : DOCU S8546v 2010

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