ABSTRACT

For centuries, various new media technologies have provided individuals with a set of powerful tools to affect their audiences. Among these the magic lantern show was perhaps the most pervasive, and persuasive. Around the world audiences gathered together in darkened rooms to see a sequence of projected images transition one into another as they listened to personal stories or scripted narrations. Through the power of the magic lantern audiences, for the first time, became the direct witnesses to distant, often traumatic, political events; they visually learned new scientific and medical knowledge, virtually experienced distant places, and collectively experienced strange, often uncanny, phenomena. Although relatively neglected until recently, the apparatus of the magic lantern is now receiving the attention it deserves from historians, curators and artists. Through a set of case studies focusing on the use of the magic lantern by very different, but equally fascinating individuals, a team of international scholars analyses the emerging power of the lantern show in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries within politics, religion, travel, science, health, marketing and entertainment. The magic lantern’s connections to today’s multimedia environments are explored through the intertwined themes of connecting, experiencing, witnessing and persuading.

chapter 1|15 pages

The Magic Lantern at Work

Witnessing, Persuading, Experiencing and Connecting

chapter 3|15 pages

Spirits in the Fairgrounds

Métempsycose and ItsAfter-Images

chapter 4|20 pages

‘We Fighters on the Outposts’

Suffragists and Lantern Slides, 1889–1913

chapter 5|21 pages

Magical Attractions

Lantern Slide Lectures at British Association for the Advancement of Science Annual Meetings, ca 1850–1920

chapter 6|14 pages

The Missionaries’ Servant

Babel, Funding and the Bible Society in Australia

chapter 7|18 pages

The Endless Universe and Eternal Life

Clement L Wragge’s Magic Lantern Lectures

chapter 8|18 pages

Flights of Fancy

The Production, Reception and Implications of Lawrence Hargrave’s Magic Lantern Lecture ‘Lope de Vega’

chapter 10|19 pages

Sidney Dickinson

‘One of the Most Entertaining Speakers Ever Upon the Melbourne Platform’

chapter 11|19 pages

The Difficulties of Witnessing

Armin T Wegner’s Lantern Slide Show on the Armenian Genocide