“Human or machine?” performing androids, “Elektro‐Homos,” and the “Phroso” and “Moto Phoso” manias on the popular stage around 1900
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Published:2023-04
Issue:2
Volume:56
Page:356-373
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ISSN:0022-3840
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Container-title:The Journal of Popular Culture
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The J of Popular Culture
Affiliation:
1. Popular Entertainment Studies/Science in Fiction Studies, Australian National Centre for the Public Awareness of Science Australian National University Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australia
Abstract
Abstract“Human or Puppet?” A once popular, now forgotten performance routine explored this question on the popular stage. Concentrating on rare historical materials, this paper uncovers how “Human or Puppet?” performances looked like and how they built on and added to the early twentieth‐century cultural discourse, and trope, of the human machine. Extending the notion of “popular modernity” this paper provides a better sense of the stories, cultural work, and aesthetic achievements emerging from the interplay of popular arts and (imaginaries of) technology, and clarifies how the braiding of (an idea of) machinery and clowning contributed to creating new comic forms.
Funder
Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),History
Reference92 articles.
1. Agramer Zeitung#36 February 14 1903 pp.4.
2. Alberts O.A.“Artist oder Maschine?”Der Artist#1522 April 12 1914 n.p.
3. Allgemeiner Tiroler Anzeiger#155 July 12 1909 pp.5.
4. “Androids.”Prager Abendblatt 26 Sept. 1888 pp.3.
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