
New Inventions and the Latest Innovations
Gaston de Pawlowski(Author)
Wakefield Press
Published on 26. September 2024
Book
Paperback/Softback
248 pages
978-1-939663-98-6 (ISBN)
Description
Satirical yet prophetical advertisements for imaginary new products, influential to Marcel Duchamp and Francis Picabia
Originally published in book form in 1916, this volume of French author Gaston de Pawlowski's (1874-1933) writings, New Inventions and the Latest Innovations, collects the humorist's fictional columns mocking his era's burgeoning consumerism and growing faith in science. From anti-slip soap, gut rests and the pocket-sized yardstick to repurposed spittoons, nasal vacuums, electric oysters and musicographical revolvers, Pawlowski offers a far-sighted critique of technological gadgetry and a cynical promise to remove discomfort from every facet of life, even as World War I raged on and technology was unleashing new horrors onto humanity.
Pawlowski's humorous cultural critique and tongue-in-cheek celebration of uselessness and futility bears relevance for today, as technology remains the hoped-for answer to our increasingly troubled human condition. Described with the excessive optimism of the sales pitch, these inventions of yesteryear were also an influence in the arts, admired by such figures as Marcel Duchamp and Raymond Queneau, and standing as a precursor to the work of such artists as Jean Tinguely and today's looming specter of AI-generated artwork and literature.
Originally published in book form in 1916, this volume of French author Gaston de Pawlowski's (1874-1933) writings, New Inventions and the Latest Innovations, collects the humorist's fictional columns mocking his era's burgeoning consumerism and growing faith in science. From anti-slip soap, gut rests and the pocket-sized yardstick to repurposed spittoons, nasal vacuums, electric oysters and musicographical revolvers, Pawlowski offers a far-sighted critique of technological gadgetry and a cynical promise to remove discomfort from every facet of life, even as World War I raged on and technology was unleashing new horrors onto humanity.
Pawlowski's humorous cultural critique and tongue-in-cheek celebration of uselessness and futility bears relevance for today, as technology remains the hoped-for answer to our increasingly troubled human condition. Described with the excessive optimism of the sales pitch, these inventions of yesteryear were also an influence in the arts, admired by such figures as Marcel Duchamp and Raymond Queneau, and standing as a precursor to the work of such artists as Jean Tinguely and today's looming specter of AI-generated artwork and literature.
Reviews / Votes
Better than a catalog from Hammacher Schlemmer or Carol Wright are the goofy gadgets described throughout the pages of Gaston de Pawlowski's 'New Inventions and the Latest Innovations.' [...] Recommended for any fan of bizarre and useless technological advances. -- Tom Bowden * Book Beat * 'New Inventions and the Latest Innovations' is an amusing little collection from times not too long gone by. Yes, it's more chuckle-fun than laugh-out-loud, but it is entertaining, and Pawlowski's extra little spins and comments make for nice added twists to the comic-absurd ideas he presents. -- M.A. Othofer * The Complete Review *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 203 mm
Width: 132 mm
Thickness: 18 mm
Weight
318 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-939663-98-6 (9781939663986)
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Schweitzer Classification