"The only scion of a once-grand Boston family, Marston was equal parts genius, charlatan, and kinkster. As an undergraduate at Harvard just before World War I, he was thrilled by militant suffragists like the ones who chained themselves to the fence outside 10 Downing Street. Maybe that's where his fusion of feminism and bondage started—imagery of slavery and shackles abounded in the movement's demonstrations and propaganda. His experiences in the psychology department left their mark, too. Marston was a lab assistant to the prominent Harvard psychologist Hugo Münsterberg, a rigid German who opposed votes for women and thought educating them was a waste of time. Münsterberg would surface in the comics as Wonder Woman’s archenemy, Dr. Psycho. ('Women shall suffer while I laugh—Ha! Ho! Ha!') Busy strapping Radcliffe students to blood-pressure machines in Münsterberg's lab, Marston invented the lie detector—a forerunner of Wonder Woman's golden lasso, which compels those it binds to speak the truth."
In The Atlantic, Katha Pollitt reviews Jill Lepore's The Secret History of Wonder Woman.
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
Change Their Minds and Change the World
Labels:
books,
family,
gender,
Lepore,
literature,
Pollitt,
psychology,
sexuality,
social history,
twentieth century
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