The reference to “The Twilight Zone”
is indicative of another side to our talk
about subliminal perception. It implies
that we shouldn’t take this stuff too seriously,
just as we shouldn’t take the plots
seen on “The Twilight Zone” too seriously.
But Glickman cannot be sure it does not
have some reality to it. He said, “Given
the rapid advance in computer technology
in this country, as well as psychological
research — much of which is being done
by the Defense Department — I think it is
incumbent upon us in Congress to at least
explore the issue to see how widespread
it is and see if anything needs to be done
about it.” What is this “psychological research”
being carried out by the Defense
Department? What is this “rapid advance
in computer technology?” What is going
on behind the scenes, perhaps in places like
the legendary Area 51?
The Source of the
Science Fiction
The path toward the realm of “The Twilight
Zone” was charted immediately
following Vicary’s revelations in 1957.
The Wall Street Journal’s account, with
its image of the “flying saucer lurking
somewhere behind the scenes,” explicitly
incorporates the themes of suspense and
strangeness.
Additional accounts of the press conference
further emphasize the science-fiction
overtones. Norman Cousins wrote
an oft-quoted editorial in the Saturday
Review, which began as follows:
“Welcome to 1984. A new company has
been formed with offices in New York for
the purpose of promoting a new invention
designed to get at the sources of human
motivation. … The device thrusts images or
messages onto a motion picture screen or
TV grid. The images are invisible to the human
eye. They are ‘subliminal’; that is, they
are beamed into the mind below the threshold
of awareness.”
The image of messages being “beamed”
into the mind is reminiscent of many science-fiction motifs popular in the 1950s. The
discourses which followed the Vicary press
conference transform and decorate Vicary’s
original presentation with a blend of images
concerning the nature of the human mind
and the manipulation of subconscious desire
for questionable ends. This can be seen in the
editorial of Cousins when he asks:
“Question: if the device is successful for
putting over popcorn, why not politicians
or anything else? If it is possible to prompt
the subconscious into making certain judgments
of human character, why wouldn’t
it be possible to use invisible messages for
the purpose of annihilating a reputation or
promoting it?”
This trend is further exemplified in Aldous
Huxley’s Brave New World Revisited,
published in 1958. Huxley considered machines
the method by which rulers, even in
democratic societies, could destroy, control
and manipulate individual freedoms while
at the same time maintaining the illusion
of that freedom. One method that Huxley
considers is the use of “subliminal projection
machines” to disperse propaganda and
advertising messages. He suggests that such
subliminal techniques might well become a
“powerful instrument for the manipulation
of unsuspecting minds” and that “The scientific
dictator of tomorrow will set up his
whispering machines and subliminal projectors
in schools and hospitals … and in all
public places where audiences can be given
a preliminary softening up by suggestibility
increasing oratory or rituals.”
In one year, from 1957 to 1958, subliminal
persuasion had been transformed
from a technique for presenting advertisements
to a technique for undermining the
very fabric of a free society. Vicary’s message
was successful in the sense that it was
persuasive, but the reaction to it was far
beyond what Vicary ever expected. During
the period 1957 to 1959, there was a
universal condemnation of the technique
and its underlying assumptions, and some
called for a federal ban of such messages.
The Subliminal Projection Co., Inc.
quickly went out of business. Vicary’s
legacy, however, has lived on through his
original characterization of subliminal persuasion
being adopted in modern cultural
representations. In an interview printed
in Advertising Age, five years later, Vicary
saw himself as having had a negligible
impact on the field. He said, “All I accomplished,
I guess … was to put a new
word into common usage. And for a man
who makes a career out of picking the
right names for products and companies, I
should have my head examined for using a
word like subliminal.”
Vicary has done much more than introduce
a new word, however. His press conference
sparked an explosion of discourse
about subliminal persuasion that has yet to
subside. This discourse introduced the concept
of subliminal persuasion to the average
person and placed it into their vocabulary
and understanding. Vicary’s original framing
of the subliminal persuasion paradigm
and its visualization in the story of the
popcorn experiment has dominated the way
in which the effects of subliminal messages
are conceptualized, represented and spoken
about in American popular culture.
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