{"id":40137,"date":"2024-07-04T08:20:18","date_gmt":"2024-07-04T06:20:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/de\/?p=40137"},"modified":"2024-07-04T11:37:04","modified_gmt":"2024-07-04T09:37:04","slug":"is-a-vacuum-cleaner-a-musical-instrument-harmonizing-the-labor-of-domestic-technologies-in-early-twentieth-century-america","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/is-a-vacuum-cleaner-a-musical-instrument-harmonizing-the-labor-of-domestic-technologies-in-early-twentieth-century-america\/","title":{"rendered":"Is a Vacuum Cleaner a Musical Instrument? Harmonizing the Labor of Domestic Technologies in Early Twentieth-Century America"},"content":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"author":5,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"inline_featured_image":false,"footnotes":""},"project":[353,860],"project_type":[725,726],"class_list":["post-40137","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","project-online-publications","project-a-sound-was-heard","project_type-formats","project_type-text"],"acf":{"bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","custom_color_css_variable":"","content_type":[{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":8,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">In C\u00e9<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"FR\">leste Boursier-Mougenot<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">\u2019s 2006 sound installation at Paula Cooper Gallery titled <i>harmonichaos,<\/i> thirteen vacuum cleaners were arranged and outfitted with a sound-frequency analyzer, harmonica, and lightbulb. As the vacuums were turned on and off, the suction of air into the harmonicas produced musical tones. According to the gallery\u2019s press release, the artist aimed to \u00bbuse nature and the rhythms of everyday life to investigate the relationship between sound, space and movement.\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">1<\/sup><\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\"> The work challenges listeners to reconsider the boundary between noise and music by rendering a banal domestic appliance as an avant-garde musical instrument. The sonic manifestation of these hybrid instruments, an unwieldy drone modulated by random changes in the intensity of the air flow, highlights their functional incompatibility: the vacuums fail to clean, the harmonicas fail to sing. We might, however, ask how a vacuum cleaner came to occupy such a distant conceptual space from a harmonica in the first place, such that Boursier-Mougenot\u2019s signifying combination elicits artistic <\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"FR\">provocation<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">When we look at vacuum cleaners alongside other commercial appliances that were marketed to middle-class homes in the same historical period, we find a shared commitment to reducing domestic labor through technological innovation. Novel devices of the home such as vacuum cleaners, radios, phonographs, player pianos, washing machines, and electric lamps were marketed to middle-class<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\"> American homes<\/span><\/span> <span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">during the twentieth century\u2019s first decades, a period of rapid industrial growth. The marketing <\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">rhetoric surrounding the commercialization of household appliances was also applied to domestic musical devices, consistently claiming that such technologies performed labor for the consumer, capable of carrying out tasks or work on the consumer\u2019s behalf.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">For example, an 1896 advertisement for the National Gramophone Company claimed that, \u00bbIt\u2019s expensive to hire an orchestra to come to your home and play for you, or a famous singer to sing for you, but if you buy a GRAMOPHONE you can buy a \u203a<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"PT\">Record<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">\u2039 of that orchestra\u2019s playing or that singer\u2019s singing for fifty cents,\u00ab as though the gramophone rendered one\u2019s journey to and from Carnegie Hall<sup class=\"is-footnote\">2<\/sup><\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\"> for a fraction of the cost, not to mention the time. The advertisement for the Crosley Radio shown in <\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"IT\">Figure 1<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\"> paints a picture of a lonely, housebound \u00bbdear old mother\u00ab \u00a0whose life will be brightened by \u00bbthe immediate response to the turn of the dials; the clearness of reception from far distant points.\u00ab The ad promises efficiency, that the radio will work on behalf of the consumer by amusing her in the comfort of her home.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_img","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":6,"img_gallery":false,"img":[40139],"img_gallery_format":false},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_img","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":6,"img_gallery":false,"img":[40141],"img_gallery_format":false},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":8,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">Similarly, The Victrola ad shown in <\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"IT\">Figure 2<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\"> shows a group of people waiting in the rain, capturing the sense that accompanies the movement to and from musical events. The ad states, \u00bbOn a stormy evening, how you will enjoy hearing the great artists through the medium of the Victrola and Victor Records in the comfort of your own home!\u00ab implying that the phonograph can save the consumer a trip out into the rain by bringing the orchestra directly to the home. <\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_img","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":6,"img_gallery":false,"img":[40143],"img_gallery_format":false},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":8,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">Certain advertisements for <\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"IT\">household<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\"> music technologies aimed toward the white middle-class woman consumer promised that these products would save her the<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"ES-TRAD\"> labor <\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">of traveling to live musical concerts in the same way washing machines meant she wouldn\u2019t have to scrub clothes by hand, and electric lightbulbs meant she didn\u2019t have to light the house with gas lamps. We find similar rhetoric in the ad shown in Figure 3 as those in <\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"FR\">Figures<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\"> 1 and 2. The Air Way Electric Cleaner is described as a \u00bbquick and easy way to free yourself from the burden of housecleaning,\u00ab just as the Victrola will save you the burdensome journey to the concert hall.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\">The player piano and phonograph afforded housewives the convenience of playing famous musical works for their children, and popular classics for their guests, without practicing the piano, just as the example with the electric Washing Machine saved the time and effort of doing domestic work by hand. This promise implicitly reveals the labor required for domestic music making, which, like other forms of domestic labor, has been historically rendered invisible within a capitalistic system that has historically valued productive labor over reproductive and artistic\/creative labor.<\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div>\r\n\r\nThe commercial music industry that came to define the twentieth century grew exponentially between 1900 to 1930, and the phonograph and radio were central to its rise. While the phonograph was a well-established feature of a middle-class home by the time radio appeared in the 1920s, and by 1930, 40.3 percent of all U.S. households owned a radio.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">3<\/sup> As a result, the widespread adoption of phonographs and radios profoundly changed domestic life, these technologies were only part of the ubiquitous electrification of the American middle-class home in the first decades of the twentieth century. In 1910, only one in ten American homes had electricity; most urban homes were wired by the end of the 1920s.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">4<\/sup> The advertising of phonographs and radios was part and parcel of vigorous campaigns selling all kinds of new household appliances throughout this rise of American electrification. Beginning in 1920, General Electric\u2019s \u00bbadvertising introduced a new objective: the creation and fostering throughout America of a positive electrical consciousness which would normally express itself in a certain fundamental \u203awant\u2039\u2013 the desire of individual families to make their homes into electrified dwelling places.\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">5<\/sup> Shortly after \u2013 between 1922 and 1930 \u2013 the annual advertising budget for General Electric increased from 2 million to 12 million dollars.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">6<\/sup>\r\n\r\n<\/div>"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_img","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":6,"img_gallery":false,"img":[40153],"img_gallery_format":false},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":8,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">These campaigns centered on rhetoric promoting a scientifically efficient home through electricity. Under the direction of Bruce Barton, General Electric campaigns such as \u00bbMake your House a Home\u00ab presented domestic labor-saving devices as essential for the housewife to excel in her role. Electrical manufacturing giants General Electric and Westinghouse asserted that electric machines could take on the burden of housework and we see this idea echoed across popular women\u2019s magazines of the era. As historian Roland Marchand argues in <em>Advertising the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity, 1920\u20131940<\/em>, advertisements from this period sought to appeal to consumer fantasies of modern life, and the largest role in the advertising tableaux was a fantasy of the modern housewife.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">7<\/sup> According to an ad that appeared in fifteen magazines between April and July 1925 including <em>Saturday Evening Post, Cosmopolitan, <\/em>and<em> Literary Digest,<\/em>\u00bbThis is the test of a successful mother \u2013 she puts first things first. She does not give to sweeping the time that belongs to her children.\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">8<\/sup> Coinciding with the scientific home-making movement, the modern American housewife trope frequently appears in advertisements as the family\u2019s general purchasing agent or G.P.A.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">9<\/sup> The transformation of the American middle-class home into an electrified bungalow awash in domestic appliances cultivated a new figure of the middle-class housewife as the manager of the home.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">10<\/sup><a href=\"applewebdata:\/\/3E846F99-8BE5-46D5-831A-9FCD9CBA01A0#_ftnref1\" name=\"_ftn1\"><\/a><\/p>"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_img","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":6,"img_gallery":false,"img":[40147],"img_gallery_format":false},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":8,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">The belief that domestic technologies would produce labor for the housewife involved a magical transformation of reproductive labor into productive labor.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">11<\/sup><\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\"> While the housewife\u2019s domestic work of cleaning and preparing food did not generate wages, devices that promised to perform this labor in her place rendered that labor productive. Ironically, the marketing rhetoric selling these technologies depended on the idea that unwaged labor was valuable. Historian Ruth Cowan Schwartz was one of the first to point out the irony that nineteenth and early twentieth-century domestic technologies falsely appeared to produce labor for the imaginary American housewife. In Cowan Schwartz\u2019s book <i>More Work for Mother: Ironies of Household Technology from the Open Hearth to the Microwave<\/i>, she argued that the process of industrialization unfolded differently in the domestic sphere than in the realm of the market.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">12<\/sup><\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\"> While convention tells us that industrialization transformed the American household by turning it from a unit of production to a unit of consumption, Cowan Schwartz stated that some technological systems moved production out of the home and into factories, but others did not, arguing that while labor-saving devices reorganized the processes of housework, they did not save the labor of the average housewife.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">13<\/sup><\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">Like housework, musical labor is hard to define precisely because it often takes place outside of the market; instead it functions as social reproduction.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">14<\/sup><\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\"> As Marxist feminist <\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"IT\">Leopoldina Fortunati<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\"> pointed out in her 1981 book, <i>L<\/i><\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span dir=\"RTL\" lang=\"AR-SA\">\u2019<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><i><span lang=\"IT\">Arcano della Riproduzione: Casalinghe, prostitute, operai e capitale<\/span><\/i><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">, domestic labor presents a quagmire for traditional Marxian analysis because it is both a necessary condition for the production of capital, yet occurs outside of the market.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">15 <\/sup><\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">The repetitive claim in the marketing of phonographs, radios, autoharps, player pianos, and theremins in the first decades of the twentieth century is that these technologies save labor and inadvertently reveals that <\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"IT\">domestic<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\"> work <i>is <\/i>labor, despite the fact that it does not generate wages.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">Furthermore, there is a paradox in the connection made here between domestic <i>music <\/i>technologies and domestic technologies that are not musical. <\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"IT\">In Figure 4<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">, the Easy Washer is sold as a device that will grant the housewife time for leisure activities, claiming she is \u00bbready to dance, to play bridge, or to see a show that same evening.\u00ab Similarly, in <\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"IT\">Figure 5<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">, the player piano is presented with the claim that the housewife can \u00bbcreate the sounds of Liszt or Rubenstein, with little or no mental effort.\u00ab Musical practice is sometimes included in household drudgery, while at other times it exemplifies leisure activities that are by definition the opposite of labor. This paradoxical understanding of musical labor resonates in sound works like <i>harmonichaos,<\/i> which call upon utilitarian devices to act as musical instruments. Indeed, perhaps <\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"NL\">Boursier-Mougenot<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">\u2019s 2006 installation not only compels us to hear resonances between a household appliance and a musical instrument, but also suggests an equivalence between domestic work and creative work.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":8,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"<p class=\"is-size-6\">Clara Latham's research and creative practice focus on the relationship between sound, technology, sexuality, and the body.\u00a0She has published articles in <em>Sound Studies, Women &amp; Music, Contemporary Modern European History<\/em>, the <em>Opera Quarterly<\/em>, and the edited volume <em>Sound, Music, Affect: Theorizing Sonic Experience<\/em>.<\/p>"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_footnotes","bgcolor":"","footnotes_list_hide_numbers":false,"footnotes":[{"footnote":"Press release available online at\r\nhttps:\/\/www.paulacoopergallery.com\/artists\/celeste-boursier-mougenot#tab:thumbnails\r\n(accessed January 27, 2024)."},{"footnote":"<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><i><span lang=\"EN-US\">Cosmopolitan <\/span><\/i><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">21 (June 1896).<\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>"},{"footnote":"<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">Steve Craig: \u00bbHow America Adopted Radio: Demographic Differences in Set Ownership Reported in the 1930 \u2013 1950 U.S. Censuses,\u00ab in: <i>Journal of Broadcasting &amp; Electronic Media <\/i>(June 2004), pp. 179\u2013<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"PT\">95, p. 182.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>"},{"footnote":"<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">David E. Nye: <i>Electrifying America: Social Meanings of a New Technology, 1880\u20131940<\/i> (Cambridge MA, 1991), p. 239.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>"},{"footnote":"\u00bbThe Home Electrical at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition,\u00ab <em>General Electric Review<\/em>, vol. 18:6 (June 1915). John Hammond, General Electric Publicity Department: \u00bbThe Psychology of a Nation\u2019s Wants.\u00ab Typescript, Hammond Papers, L 5145. Cited in <em>Electrifying America<\/em>, p. 265."},{"footnote":"<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><i><span lang=\"EN-US\">Electrifying America, <\/span><\/i><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">p. 268.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>"},{"footnote":"Roland Marchand: <em>Advertising the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity, 1920\u20131940<\/em> (Berke-ley and Los Angeles, 1985), p. 168."},{"footnote":"<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><i><span lang=\"EN-US\">Electrifying America,<\/span><\/i><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"NL\"> pp. 271<\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">\u201372.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>"},{"footnote":"Marchand: p. 168; Robert Sklar, ed. <em>The Plastic Age: 1917\u20131930<\/em> (New York 1970), pp. 94\u201395."},{"footnote":"Alice Kessler-Harris: <em>Women Have Always Worked: A Concise History<\/em>, (Urbana 2018), pp. 43\u201345."},{"footnote":"Nancy Fraser characterizes this magical transformation as cannibalism. See Nancy Fraser: <em>Cannibal Capitalism: How Our System is Devouring Democracy, Care, and the Planet \u2013 and What We Can Do About It<\/em>, Verso Books, 2023, pp. 17\u201323."},{"footnote":"<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">See Ruth Cowan Schwartz: <i>More Work for Mother: The Ironies of Household Technology from the Open Hearth to the Microwave<\/i>(New York 1985).<\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>"},{"footnote":"<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">Ibid., pp. 44\u201345. <\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>"},{"footnote":"<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">For work on music as social reproduction, see Eric Drott: \u00bbMusic and the Work of Social Reproduction,\u00ab <i>Cultural Politics<\/i> 15 (2019): pp. 162\u2013183; Marie Thompson: \u00bbSounding the Arcane: Contemporary Music, Gender and Reproduction,\u00ab in: <i>Contemporary Music Review<\/i> 39 (2020): pp. 273\u201392.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>"},{"footnote":"<div>\r\n<p class=\"BodyA\"><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"IT\">Leopoldina Fortunati: <\/span><\/span><span class=\"None\"><i><span lang=\"EN-US\">\u00a0L\u2019<\/span><\/i><\/span><span class=\"None\"><i><span lang=\"IT\">Arcano della Riproduzione: Casalinghe, prostitute, operai e capitale <\/span><\/i><\/span><span class=\"None\"><span lang=\"EN-US\">(1981) (The Arcane of Reproduction: Housework, Prostitution, Labor and Capital, 1995).<\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>"}]}]},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/40137","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=40137"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/40137\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":40966,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/40137\/revisions\/40966"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=40137"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"project","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/project?post=40137"},{"taxonomy":"project_type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/project_type?post=40137"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}