In 1911, Electra Sparks (the nom de plume of Mary Lawton Metcalfe) began writing for the Moving Picture News, a New York-based trade journal.Footnote 1 In some sixteen essays, she advocated variously for the moral reform of cinema; for the use of moving pictures in education; for a correspondent broadening of moving pictures to new screening locations; and for a form of filmic treatment, a cine-therapy, for pregnant women.
The Moving Picture News was above all concerned with promoting educational cinema and identifying new markets for it.Footnote 2 This position obliged the journal to take a stance against outright bans on cinema in schools, but in favour of its wider censorship; it was part of a debate around the place of film that was still being held in communities across the United States, as it would be for many years.Footnote 3 The editors’ championing of educational cinema pitted them against clergymen and educators, whose vexed letters they printed, and whom they attempted to persuade in the pages of the journal.
Electra Sparks was a strategic invitation to the Moving Picture News, insofar as she had religious and educational bona fides, was involved in the who's who of society life in Staten Island and New York City, and had accomplished work that was thematically in line with pre-existing causes of the journal.Footnote 4 However, she went far beyond the journal's editorial norms in style, fervour and the ambitions of her demands. She took cinema-education advocacy to its very limit. ‘There is a bomb I am going to throw right into educational circles’ – the bomb of moving pictures.Footnote 5
Alongside advertisements for movie theatre technologies, reports from foreign markets, announcements and synopses of current films, the editors might normally recommend that every New York school purchase a movie projector; Sparks went further, demanding that every university, public library, Sunday school and church have one.Footnote 6 Margaret I. MacDonald, the writer who invited Sparks to join the magazine's roster, made weekly visits to New York City movie theatres in order to push for educational programming; Sparks began her own matinee series and did it herself.Footnote 7 A Chicago asylum's plan to treat its patients with ‘an entertainment of moving pictures as a curative means’ might receive a modest, sceptical notice in the Moving Picture News; Sparks, by contrast, called for an entirely new, curative cinema, one which would encourage mothers to develop the right thoughts by which they could positively ‘mark’ their embryonic child as they viewed a film: she called for a cinema for the unborn.Footnote 8
Electra Sparks (1859–1949) had shifting bylines from week to week. Consolidated, they produce an eclectic CV; annotated, they offer an outline of her causes and enterprises in her most active period:
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• Lecturer: delivering a ‘rapid-fire lecturette’ at a moment's notice, including talks on ‘The psychology of the moving picture’ and ‘The moving picture to the good’.Footnote 9
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• Newspaper advice columnist: ‘the Dorothy Dix of the Staten Island World’.Footnote 10
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• Silk advocate: chairman of Central Committee Scientific Silk Culture.Footnote 11
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• Education reformer: secretary of the Society of Human Culture.Footnote 12
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• Film programmer and theorist: president of the People's Club of Patriotic Education.Footnote 13
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• Suffragette: president, Economics and Politics Club, New York City Federation.Footnote 14
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• Patriot: Daughter of the American Revolution – ‘but just change the R into an E and you have a daughter of Evolution, which I really am’.Footnote 15
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• Christian: New Thought evolutionist, ‘and therefore not a bit stuck up’.Footnote 16
There is much in this vita that prompts curiosity, for to gather Sparks's activities in this way is to constellate largely forgotten influences. She was at the nexus of two marginal domains of intellectual life in the United States that coincided in the 1910s: the peak of a metaphysical Christianity then known as New Thought; and the beginning of (what we now call) classical film theory. Both fields shared an interest in the concept of ‘mental pictures’, images that we see in our mind's eye: for New Thought believers, they were healing visualizations to be kept in mind alongside prayer; and for film theorists such as Hugo Münsterberg, mental pictures were those processes of mind transformed by cinema. Moving pictures, and their impact on the mind, were important for each, who shared a belief that the mind was, in effect, ‘photosensitive’ – but Electra Sparks alone synthesized these divergent philosophies and activated them as practice.
She did so against a background of a neo-Lamarckism that allowed for the culturally acquired traits of the parent to be passed on to the child, a belief that coincided with an early revival of cinema, when millions were first seeing moving pictures on thousands of screens. These phenomena together created a concern for cinematic epigenetics that has ebbed and flowed through film history. What is the physiological effect of this immersive medium, and how does this effect alter the viewer and her children? Here, I recover Sparks's work not only for historians of science and medicine, as a demonstration of the public understanding of maternal impression at the beginning of the twentieth century, but also for film historians, for whom this missing theory of film will resonate with today's immersive media landscape. I relate Sparks's work not only to her spiritual milieu, and to the film theory of her day (via Hugo Münsterberg, who shared her attitude to film), but also to film and media theory of today. In each instance, we see the enthusiasts of the new medium moving past immediate medicalization concerns toward a generational logic: from the viewer reproducing the emotions or aesthetics on screen within themselves, to the viewer reproducing children that have internalized and carry within them these aesthetic structures of the screen.
Moving pictures and mental pictures
A premise of Electra Sparks's film theory is that the moving picture is an appropriate new media metaphor for the processes of the mind. She offers an evocative account of a routine experience of vision and cognition:
Through the lens of the human eye, upon the camera of the conscious observing faculties, located in the nerves of the brain, sights and scenes are being printed incessantly of passing objects and scenes.
There are, therefore, millions of mental-picture galleries of past views of real happenings. Mental pictures of happenings in farce, comedy, tragedy, indeed stories of joy and sorrow are incessantly being stamped on the mental films of every conscious creature.Footnote 17
Just as the retinal purple of the eye was then thought to be sensitive to light in much the same way as the Kodak camera, the mind, for Sparks, operated like a moving picture.Footnote 18 This type of physiological–medial correlation has a long history. Think of Marx's famous borrowing of the phantasmagoria to explain commodities, or of the moving panorama as the default reference for the aerial view. Today, the media metaphor of choice for the mind is the computer.Footnote 19 In 1911, it was the moving picture.
This comparison between mind and film was typical of some of the most important classical film theorists, above all Hugo Münsterberg.Footnote 20 Sparks, however, took this premise in an unforeseen direction. What Münsterberg thought to be a temporary mental mimicry of the screen – for instance, when the viewer sees a dizzy person on screen, and experiences dizziness in turn – Sparks took to be permanent. ‘We know’, she claimed, ‘that the eye learns more rapidly than the ear; and that it is the scenes impressed upon this brain-camera that make indelible impression’.Footnote 21 This indelibility was her concern. Mental pictures were commensurate with the soul.Footnote 22 Cinema was, in 1911, just entering its ‘second birth’, with dedicated screening locations and a reputation that was less dependent upon its sister arts; it was emerging as a dominant medium and industry rather than a novel technology.Footnote 23 More and more people were going to the movies, so the moral quality of images presented was of crucial importance. Mental pictures, delivered via moving pictures, could affect powerful change on the viewer, positive or negative. Images viewed on screen were, Sparks claimed in a lecture at the Gotham Club, ‘truly being stored up in the realm of the subconscious mind, that mysterious power house, the heaven or hell in the moving world of constructive thinking to the good or to the bad’.Footnote 24
Sparks's concerns were not merely behavioural – the ‘Wild West thrillers’ that she deplored were not to be avoided because they could encourage crime, as reformers have perennially insisted – rather, her concerns were physiological.Footnote 25 Exposure to morally corrupt films could warp the viewer and produce illness and disease; concomitantly, exposure to virtuous films could produce positive physical change. This was true for adults and children freely choosing to visit the movie theatre, but Sparks's special concern was for the unborn, brought there without choice. They, she proposed, might be permanently corrupted:
Thousands of unborn children could be numbered in the audiences of all nations where moving picture theaters are established.
Shall women pregnant with ‘future hopes’ of nations for universal peace be impressed for war?
Shall unborn boys thirst for the blood of human brothers through the mental pictures of the mother?Footnote 26
The terminology here indicates that Sparks is familiar with the theory of ‘maternal impression’: that the future child was vulnerable to the mother's imagination and (especially) visual and cultural experiences in utero, and that these experiences could determine the eventual difference between birthing an Elephant Man or an Adonis. A standard, apocryphal example would be the mother who sees a dwarf while pregnant, and goes on to give birth to a dwarf. The mother and the foetus, temporarily impressible, respond to visual stimulus. Originating in antiquity, the concept of maternal impression survived for centuries in both learned and vernacular discussion of reproduction.Footnote 27 By the eighteenth century, natural philosophers and physicians tended to dismiss the theory as an unscientific superstition associated with notorious hoaxes, such as that of Mary Toft, who in 1726 claimed to have delivered rabbits after seeing a rabbit. But reports of maternal impressions persisted in medical journals even around the year 1900.Footnote 28 It was prominent in Aristotle's Masterpiece (1684), one of the most widely circulated books on sex and reproduction in the English language, through its many editions and reprintings, and endured into the twentieth century as a common explanation for deformities, birthmarks and character traits.Footnote 29 So, too, does it continue today, when the theory has been recast as a form of populist proto-epigenetics.Footnote 30
Sparks's advocacy for a cinema for the unborn was inspired by the positive mind-cure tenets of the ‘New Thought people’, for whom maternal impression was an article of faith, and who ordered their believers to ‘write only to the good’.Footnote 31 Sparks was correspondingly more interested in creating a race of Adonises than she was in preventing deformity. New Thought, a motley allegiance of small metaphysical Christian groups, favoured mesmerism, magnetic cures and faith healing, among other disputed treatments. Because they believed that the disposition of the mind had the power to impact the body, there was an institutional tendency to articulate their methods in terms of uplift and goodness.
Sparks believed that film could be the great democratizer of beautiful images – or, more worryingly, a leveller of ugly ones. Every change in the image on screen, good or bad, left a corresponding mark on the viewer. She was not alone in this. Even the film critics of Hollywood industry papers, such as Variety, were concerned that negative images on screen could impress themselves upon the pregnant mother and the foetus.Footnote 32 In this way, the dream of maternal impression was, as Lorraine Daston has observed, the dream of a perfect, receptive medium that reproduced external stimuli.Footnote 33 The foetal ‘viewer’ was so passive as to reproduce the qualities of the new medium of moving pictures; so passive as to become, essentially, an extension of the film: a foetal medium. As Sparks framed it, with the bolded text that she often favoured,
Constant scenes of beauty cannot fail to make a brand new mental-film on the minds of unborn children. But you ask me how are the city's poor to get the inspiring scenes of nature; the breezy scent of early dawn from the meadows? How are expectant mothers to enjoy the flowers and fields and see young lambs frisking on the hillside and run to their mothers for milk? And I answer you: The Moving Picture Is the People's Theater.Footnote 34
Sparks's theory of film was, as she referred to it, a ‘glorious New Thought hash’.Footnote 35 A self-professed New Thought adherent, her ideas about cinema are expressly inspired by its teachings. Indeed, the ideas of the moving picture as metaphor for mind, of the mental picture as concept for mind, and of the pre- and post-natal physiological power of art are all embedded in New Thought teachings.Footnote 36 Who, then, were the ‘New Thought people’?
Metaphysical obstetrics
New Thought was an umbrella term for a diverse array of groups – some of which adopted the term, some not – that participated in the mind-cure movement that occupied metaphysical Christianity in the United States at the turn of the nineteenth century. As a sympathetic critic framed it, ‘The New Thought like Christian Science affirms the supremacy of Mind[.] It holds that all diseases are of mental origin and are curable by mental means’.Footnote 37 New Thought emerged in the 1890s and was largely gone by 1920.Footnote 38 The full extent of the movement is difficult to quantify, since terminology was not invariably shared among groups, but in the time that Electra Sparks was writing, historian Beryl Satter has estimated, there were around 350 New Thought centres in North America and six journals with circulation in the thousands.Footnote 39 Materially, the self-help book was New Thought's greatest success. Many of its publications sold well enough to be published in multiple editions: Phrenopathy of Rational Mind-Cure (1898), The New Thought Simplified (1904), Christian Mind Healing (1915), and many others. The body of work has warranted several dedicated archives and library collections.Footnote 40 Beyond this, there were prominent New Thought cultural producers – most famously the poet Ella Wheeler Wilcox of ‘laugh and the world laughs with you’ fame – and the cartoonist Richard F. Outcault, creator of the Yellow Kid, the iconic comic strip character. Like Sparks, these producers were operating at the level of the ‘high low-brow’, as it was then pejoratively called: in short, ambitious populism.Footnote 41 Their New Thought beliefs, in every instance, heavily informed their work.
In the pages of New Thought journals, alongside mind-cure techniques, one might find pieces on telepathy, yoga, psychometry and astrology; depending on one's point of view, it was either a benign, ‘popular intellectual discourse’,Footnote 42 or a ‘riot of individualism’, ‘a nebulous compound of agnosticism, pantheism, esoteric Buddhism and Christianity’.Footnote 43 This melange was in any case an institutional strength, at the time, insofar as it allowed diverse strands of mind-cure thought to consolidate and, potentially, to compete with Mary Baker Eddy's Christian Science, the rival metaphysical doctrine that successfully formalized its practice – and which, unlike the majority of New Thought groups, remains active today.Footnote 44
The relationship between New Thought and Christian Science is contested, and is addressed in all New Thought histories. Both New Thought and Christian Science were inspired, originally, by the mesmerist Phineas Quimby in the mid-nineteenth century. A rereading of both groups would locate Christian Science as merely the successful, Boston Brahmin version of a whole field of Christian mind-cure denominations, with New Thought as the Westward-looking, progressive, extreme wing. Prayer, for New Thought, verged on being a ‘therapeutic, almost secular device’ – and the movie theatre would be their cathedral.Footnote 45
Film preoccupied New Thought thinkers from the beginnings of the medium. A typical New Thought publication such as Seeing the Invisible: Practical Studies in Psychometry, Thought Transference, Telepathy, and Allied Phenomena (1906) used the biograph, an early form of moving picture camera, as an extended analogy for the invisible attributes of the natural world that readers could be trained to detect. Specifically, it was argued that the mind can uncover ‘nature's invisible biograph’, including auras, or indeed thoughts.Footnote 46 Other New Thought texts used film as analogy for the ‘objective world’, to suggest its malleability and simulacral quality: ‘the idea that the entire visible universe is a moving picture of subjective thoughts which project it’.Footnote 47
The greatest New Thought preoccupation with moving pictures was its symmetry with the abiding tenet of ‘mental pictures’. This term was already in use by the progressive wing of nineteenth-century education reform. ‘Mental pictures’ was a key concept for educators, and in 1861 a book with this title was published, aiming to help children recall Bible stories by developing strong mental pictures of them – echoing the techniques of the ‘art of memory’ of antiquity. Early film boosters recognized that the moving picture could build upon this pre-existing philosophy. Even Thomas Edison used this terminology, in his ‘Plea for the motion picture’: ‘A printed description is obviously incomplete, and mental pictures are formed that are generally incorrect’. But,
if geography were taught by moving pictures, if foreign lands and cities were illustrated, if the topography and general characteristics were shown, if the habits and demeanor of the people were depicted, and if their occupations and methods of work and recreation were illustrated, the child would have as clear an idea of everything as if the original scenes were viewed directly.Footnote 48
Notably, the addition of movement to the extant concept of mental pictures, which was heretofore premised upon photography or painting, was key.Footnote 49 The speed of moving pictures was seen as a crucial advantage in their pedagogic utility. Sparks introduced a typical period view that ‘the eye learns more rapidly than the ear’, and ‘light travels faster than sound’, adding to this premise the ‘dynamic’,Footnote 50 ‘active’ cinema that could best ‘chain the attention’ of the viewer.Footnote 51 Cinema, with its speed, was the only medium to match the pace of thought, and so better impressed imagery upon the mind.
Rather than a simple mnemonic device, we might call New Thought's use of mental pictures ‘creative visualization’ or ‘positive thinking’ today – each concept analogous to, if not directly descended from, New Thought practice. At the time, however, the mental picture was a conceptual lynchpin of New Thought practice – practically every publication made reference to it – and they could be positive or negative, with corresponding physical outcome. Nuggets of New Thought, a typical advice manual, proposed, ‘Get rid of your old, gloomy mental pictures – Make a bonfire of them – Get rid of the particularly miserable one, first of all – Then put bright ones in their places’.Footnote 52 Mental pictures were crucial, given their imaginative and transformative power over the unborn. As a writer in Unity, one of New Thought's long-running journals and churches, phrased it, ‘The mother is just as much the creator of her own child as the artist is of his picture, or the composer of his music’.Footnote 53 Children are media made with their mother's influences, including cultural ones.
Prenatal culturing (distinct, but related to, maternal impression) was everywhere in New Thought as well as Christian Science; its most prominent members addressed the topic, and all agreed on the power of nurture over nature.Footnote 54 Mary Baker Eddy, the founder of the Church of Jesus Christ, Scientist, developed a class in ‘metaphysical obstetrics’ that she taught at the Massachusetts Metaphysical College. In the notes that survive from the course, Eddy argued against the ‘prenatal mesmerism’ that was the idea of heredity, and instead for the ‘prenatal influence’ of the mother.Footnote 55 Ella Wheeler Wilcox, meanwhile, demonstrated the ‘power of prenatal influence’ with the example of Napoleon, whose ‘mother read Roman history with absorbing interest during the months preceding his birth’. ‘Think of the nations and the centuries influenced by that one woman's mental concentration!’ she continued, ‘The geography of the world was changed by her power of focused thought’.Footnote 56
Prenatal culturing was no small matter; it could rise to the level of geopolitics. For Wilcox, a writer, it was the printed word that carried the most power; she urged the expectant mother to strategically ‘read inspiring books’.Footnote 57 Prior to the rise of cinema, however, New Thought writers customarily looked to painting to provide the right kind of mental pictures for pregnant women. Testaments of successful New Thought practice were often gathered into collections, with the gathered stories meant to be object lessons for the reader. Alongside success stories of individuals, say quitting tobacco use, or healing tuberculosis through the use of mind-cure techniques, prenatal culturing stories such as the following were ubiquitous in the literature:
I knew a frivolous little butterfly who determined that her first child should be born with yellow curly hair and blue eyes, though all her relatives and her husband's were dark and straight haired. Every day this little woman gazed long and often at the picture of a beautiful child she had seen, and imagined and willed her child to be like it. And he was – the most seraphic little blue-eyed, curly-golden-haired cherub I ever saw.Footnote 58
This story has a happy ending, according to the arguably eugenic values of New Thought, because the mother knew to use New Thought methods and had access to a strong picture on which she could premise her mental pictures. What of those expectant mothers who were not aware of the benefits of beautiful images on the unborn, or, worse, did not have access to them? How were they to be prenatally cultured, even without their knowing? The fine arts would be of no assistance. In the book Maternal Impressions, purity advocate Charles Bayer dismissed the prospect of making museums free to the poor, since it would be merely ‘[f]eeding a hungry lion with rose leaves’. All such efforts to ‘elevate the criminal classes’ were doomed to ‘failure until the slum element becomes mentally able to appreciate art’.Footnote 59 The answer, then, was cinema, which required no expertise, and which the poor could and already did participate in. This was Electra Sparks's insight.
Sparks's cinema
Sparks believed so earnestly in the power of the cinema's mental images, that she suggested that a New York film censor of her acquaintance, who ‘had witnessed thousands and thousands of films during the last few years’, was correspondingly ‘one of the most beautiful women [she had] ever seen’, made beautiful by this viewing practice.Footnote 60 Her belief in the power of the cinema's mental images was so fervent that she set to work advocating for a New Thought cinema that would provide the appropriate mental images.
Sparks began by petitioning movie producers themselves, in lectures and via the pages of the Moving Picture News:Footnote 61
Let those whose culture began before they were born; those who have gone in the business of manufacturing films for popular demand begin now and create a desire of the masses to see such pictures projected that will impress the mental films of unborn babies, and begin thus the first steps in primary education of the unborn race.Footnote 62
Her appeal did not necessarily go unheard, but there was no immediate response. So it was that in 1911 and 1912 she began three separate series of educational film screenings for the children of Staten Island. At the Richmond, Park and Odeon theatres she made arrangements to screen matinees or Sunday morning programmes. These educational screenings were, she wrote, a ‘copyright-canned idea of new thought’, and she personally selected the films, a number of which were the product of New York-based film studio the Thanhouser Company. These included respectable classics such as The Tempest (1911) or The Siege of Troy (1911),Footnote 63 scenics featuring the San Catalina Island and Lake Garda, and fairy tales The Pied Piper of Hamelin Town (1911) and Cinderella (1911). Sparks would lecture between the films, which had the brief lengths typical of early cinema, and the series was (self-reportedly) successful, attracting hundreds to the eight-hundred-seat Richmond Theatre.Footnote 64
Her efforts to curate New Thought values into regional screening practice were ultimately in vain, since the local laws maintained that it was ‘against the law for children under 16 to go in a moving picture palace unaccompanied’.Footnote 65 The police broke up one of her screenings as it was in progress, and that seems to have ended the experiment –in fact, her account of this raid is her final published article in the Moving Picture News. She deplored the law's inability to distinguish between her educational programming and such vaudevillian material as you might find in a working-class Bowery movie theatre. But this was not Sparks's only attempt to forge a New Thought cinema.
As she was running her screening series, she also published a manifesto claiming the ‘Ten Links in moral and mental development, which can be taught and idealized through the moving picture apparati’. These ‘links’ were a lexicon of New Thought values: interest and cheerfulness, imagination and ideality, kindness and sympathy, emulation and industry, courage and resourcefulness, observation and investigation, thought and reason, patriotism and fidelity, ambition and tenacity of purpose, spirituality and culture.Footnote 66 This jumble of key words – which are left unelaborated in the manifesto –might not have offered a coherent set of guidelines for the sympathetic film producer, but Sparks also provided a script, or outline for a moving picture (she called it ‘Mental Films for a Picture Story’). It gives some sense of the type of cinema that she might have hoped for.
Tellingly, the film is concerned with neonatal culturing. Called ‘The captain's treasure’, it begins with a disaster at sea, and the captain (a lighthouse keeper) who attempts to save a washed-up baby girl thought dead: ‘There is life in the little storm-beaten body. The women work on the baby. They clamor to get possession of it. The captain steps among them and takes the treasure for himself.’Footnote 67 The captain takes the baby home to the lighthouse to raise her. Again, local women contest his parentage:
Six fishwives cross the bridge and climb the lighthouse stair. They enter the ‘Cap'n's’ cabin and see him feeding the baby. Makes a funny face, and shows he has no experience with ‘leetle gals’. The visitors make merry at his awkward handling and feeding of a baby. Again they put out their hands and offer to adopt it. ‘Cap'n’ shakes his head and hugs the baby to his breast.Footnote 68
The outline then cuts to various vignettes in the later life of the baby (Pearl): as an older child, doting on the captain, whom she has chosen over a blood-relative uncle; meeting her suitor, who likewise rescues her from the water, this time in a swimming accident; and, following the death of the captain, her ‘society wedding’ and honeymoon. The end.
The captain, not unlike Sparks's prenatal cinema, is an improbable educator. His suitability is questioned repeatedly, but he is ultimately a successful parent, and one who exemplifies a number of Sparks's favoured values: kindness and sympathy (rescuing Pearl); courage and resourcefulness (raising her); fidelity (to his foundling); and spirituality and culture (marriage and the society wedding). The script mirrors the advice literature on parenting that New Thought writers engaged in at the time (and which was simultaneously booming for publishers), and also reflects the progressive gender politics of New Thought practitioners who, like Christian Scientists, were predominantly women.
New Thought values are, in short, embedded in the picture. But how to impress them upon the minds of the viewer? Throughout, Sparks punctuates the narrative with striking images of light: ‘One long beam falls on the roaring waters from the great white light of the tower’, ‘A great ball of fire rises over stormy waters’, the captain ‘throws wood into the open stove and makes a blaze’.Footnote 69 These images were to brand the strong values of the moving picture indelibly upon the mental picture of the viewer; to brand, perhaps, the expectant mother and her child.
Sparks's script was never made into a film, and beyond 1913 there is little record of her activities; apart from writing film synopses in the 1920s she had nothing more to do with cinema.Footnote 70 (By 1917 she had moved to Florida, where she died in 1949.Footnote 71 ) Nevertheless, her push for a New Thought cinema had an unlikely, if unconnected, fruition in Hollywood later in the 1910s, when actor Douglas Fairbanks and director Cecil B. DeMille dabbled in it. Reaching for the Moon (1917), which starred Fairbanks, would likely have disappointed Sparks, as the premise of the film was to ‘poke fun at New Thought’. As the film's director and writer put it, ‘Suppose we start with this young American and make him a rabid believer in New Thought. Let him think that anything on earth he wants (no matter whether he is entitled to it or not) he can get simply by concentrating on it’.Footnote 72 Fairbanks's protagonist, Alexis Caesar Napoleon Brown, comes under the ill influence of an explicitly New Thought tract titled Concentration.Footnote 73 Intertitle extracts from the book provide an accurate satire, and preserve some of the key terminology: ‘You can make yourself a towering figure in the world through the power of concentration. Think hard of what you wish to be and hold the mental picture – concentrate on it and it will be come true’. Ultimately, Fairbanks's character imagines himself a king, conspiracy ensues, and things go badly; it is a cautionary tale against the techniques of New Thought.
By the mid-1920s New Thought had become a Hollywood punchline. The debut issue of journalist H.L. Mencken's American Mercury in 1924 featured a withering attack on New Thought and its techniques, framing the method as follows: ‘A boy of twelve admires Charlie Chaplin. He sets his subjective mind to work that night, and wakes up with a fine little mustache’.Footnote 74 The author echoes an earlier poem critical of New Thought, which details failed attempts to use imaging techniques for personal beautification. It concludes, ‘On mental pictures, you bet, I waste no more time / Motion pictures, or none, hereafter, for mine’.Footnote 75 However, Electra Sparks's failure to see the cinema she envisaged produced, and the decline of New Thought as a movement, do not make it irrelevant to film history and theory, or indeed to contemporary film and media.
New Thought film theory
As in the case of, for instance, spirit photography, widely held but subsequently discredited beliefs can reveal much about our attitudes toward new technologies.Footnote 76 They can even reveal hidden tributaries of contemporary understanding. I propose here that Sparks's apparently fringe film theory is surprisingly consonant with, and indeed presages, one of the abiding preoccupations of both classical and contemporary film theory: the isomorphism between mind and film, between mental picture and moving picture.
Some of this was merely incidental. The poet Vachel Lindsay, in his early appreciation The Art of the Motion Picture (1916), claimed that the coming of film replaced the verbal thinking of the proletariat, their ‘cunning of the tongue’, with an imagistic cognition: they began to ‘think in pictures’.Footnote 77 For Lindsay, this transition was positive, due to film's educative capacity; the world would become an ‘imaginary playground’, and all would have advance familiarity with its cities.Footnote 78 Although Mencken once accused Lindsay of spouting only ‘New Thought dithyrambs’, Lindsay's connections to the group were apparently nil.Footnote 79 The symmetry between his and Sparks's valuation of the cinema for its capacity to produce new mental pictures was accidental, part of the zeitgeist of responses to the newly ascendant medium. Other symmetries were not.
New Thought has had a wide, and to this point unexamined, impact on film theory via the work of Hugo Münsterberg, the Harvard psychologist whose film theories in The Photoplay (1916) have undergone a scholarly renaissance. Münsterberg took for granted that cinema, as a new medium, would develop new relations between the mind and body for viewers. Like Sparks, he thought that cinema could be emancipatory;Footnote 80 like Sparks, he developed a complex equivalence between processes of mind and processes of cinema;Footnote 81 and like Sparks, he allowed not only for the idea that the formal operations of the film mirrored thought (the flashback as memory, the flashforward as imagination), but also for moving pictures that physiologically ‘mark’ the viewer. In an average film viewing experience, Münsterberg claimed, ‘abnormal visual impressions stream into our consciousness, [and] our whole background of fusing bodily sensations becomes altered and new emotions seem to take hold of us’. If a viewer sees a hypnotized man on screen, say, and the filmmaker formally reflects his state by having the space represented on screen begin ‘to tremble and then to wave and to change its form more and more rapidly’, the viewer would reciprocate in kind, and themselves become hypnotized, ‘seized by the strange emotion’.Footnote 82
The apparent congruence between Sparks's theory and Münsterberg's, and the physiological power they each afford to cinema, is not accidental. Münsterberg was already familiar with the European milieu of ‘physiological aesthetics’, the scientific study of the effects of art on the body.Footnote 83 His experimental psychology reflected this interest, and especially his interest in the motion pictures. These extant interests were put to work in a Cambridge–Boston milieu during which Christian Science, and its focus on the impact of the mind on the body (the mind-cure), was ascendant. The values of physiological aesthetics and the mind-cure found an easy symmetry in Münsterberg's approach; each is a practical synonym for ‘psychotherapy’. Münsterberg was a well known and highly positioned sympathizer of mental healing. Writing so proximately to Boston in these years, he was quite familiar with Mary Baker Eddy and allied movements based there. His landmark text, Psychotherapy (1909), took seriously the mind-cure, and aimed to make it palatable to scientists.
Christian Science is everywhere in Psychotherapy: Münsterberg quotes Eddy at length,Footnote 84 and argues in favour of Christian Science techniques as a ‘symptom of transition’ from a popular, religious psychotherapy to a scientific one.Footnote 85 It has even been claimed that Münsterberg was a ‘great early contributor to the translation of New Thought narrative into scientific discovery’.Footnote 86 New Thought journals embraced his work as well; one claimed that Münsterberg ‘could be read with profit both before the study of New Thought books and also subsequently to the reading of a dozen of them’.Footnote 87 Münsterberg may have encountered Sparks's writing directly, given his readings in both the mind-cure movement and early film journals. In any case, his awareness of this general philosophy had an impact on his own.
Owing perhaps chiefly to Münsterberg's continued relevance in film studies, New Thought film theory is today back in fashion. The same terminology even recurs: ‘Motion pictures unfold mental pictures, and such pictures actually “move” us’. This might be Electra Sparks writing in 1911; in fact, it is film theorist Giuliana Bruno, writing in 2014.Footnote 88 The idea that the cinema marks us, changes us physiologically, became a key area of inquiry in film studies – in the turn to phenomenology by scholars such as Linda Williams and Vivian Sobchack,Footnote 89 as well as in the ‘modernity thesis’ debates.Footnote 90 Likewise, the symmetry between mind and screen is often taken as a given by present-day film theorists – and, increasingly, by new media scholars. Assuming a homology between ‘mental representations and operations with external visual effects such as dissolves … and edited sequences’ is not Münsterberg in 1916; rather, it is Lev Manovich in 2001.Footnote 91
If these sentiments seem niche or esoteric, one must only recall the ongoing, de facto provision against pregnant women viewing certain types of film – those from the horror genre, in particular.Footnote 92 There exists a cottage industry of online ‘listicles’ warning of ‘the films no pregnant women should see’. The implied result of maternal impression is customarily sublimated. Sparks-like concerns maintain not only at the popular level, but in the sciences as well. There has been a century of study on the physiological effects of cinema – on, for instance, the power of immersive film experiences to habituate viewers to motion sickness, or for 3D viewing glasses to strengthen the eye – but a recent experiment in Japan put New Thought theories to the test. In 2010, researcher Kazuyuki Shinohara and colleagues aimed to measure the effects of maternal emotions on the foetus, showing pregnant women
two empirically validated feature film clips [which] were used for the external generation of two subjectively and facially well-characterized target emotions, happiness and sadness. The happiness-inducing film clip was taken from The Sound of Music and depicted a scene of a female teacher smiling and singing for children. The sadness-inducing film clip was from The Champ, in which a boy cries at the death of his father … An emotionally neutral film clip was used to control for potentially confounding features of the emotion-generating film task, such as emotionally irrelevant visual stimulation and eye movement. This clip consisted of many figures slowly appearing, disappearing or moving around.Footnote 93
Throughout, two ultrasound scanners were employed, monitoring foetal arm and leg movement respectively. The result: arm movement increased correspondent to the happiness of the mother; and less movement was detected during response to sad scenes. The results were reported in New Scientist with the title ‘If mum is happy and you know it, wave your arms’, and they have already been included in advice guides for pregnant women, alongside prenatal culturing tools such as the Baby Mozart series.Footnote 94
The survival, or revival, of this line of thought in the present day was by no means a given. Many early film theories are no longer meaningfully in practice. Such questions – does the moving image have a physiological effect? Does the mind operate cinematically? – ebb and flow in the histories of film theory and science. Perhaps on account of the present-day reckoning with the digital revolution's new and destabilizing viewing practices and cultures, these questions have had a renaissance. The New Thought premise of such theory should now be clear. With an assumption that mind-cures of physical ailments are possible, New Thought film theory can proceed easily from the literal (film impacts physiology) to the analogical (film is homologous with mind).
Similarly, the role of reproduction in this essay has ranged from the reproduction of a new mass generation of foetal viewers to be prenatally cultured by the newly accessible media of cinema, to the reproduction of filmic processes in the body and the mind. Although these may appear to be discrepant forms of reproduction, they form a basically structured relationship, one premised, during cinema's second birth and now, on the strange power and possibility of emergent media. In this sense, the present-day interest in these questions retains Sparks's utopian view: that access to cinema will be ubiquitous, its influence profound, felt at the deepest levels of being.