Agency through Otherness: Portraits of Performers in Circus Route Books, 1875-1925

Bogdan, Robert. "Freak Show : Presenting Human Oddities for Amusement and Profit"

Robert Bogdan, Freak Show : Presenting Human Oddities for Amusement and Profit  (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1988).

Pages cited: 97

Describes the tactics sideshow promoters used to create a salable image of performers. This included everything from small fibs—adding or subtracting inches or pounds to a performer’s description or altering ages—to grandiose lies and constructions of identities, such as the presentation of a performer’s backstory as being only partially human, or being part of a culture to which they had no ties; and Robert Bogdan’s “The Social Construction of Freaks” in Freakery.

 See also Janet M. Davis, “The Circus Americanized” in The American Circus, for a discussion of how performers who were women of color were advertised and the areas of the circus show where they most often performed; and see Bernth Lindfors’ descriptions of Barnum’s approach to presenting performances of people from non-Western Cultures in the “Circus Africans” chapter in Early African Entertainments Abroad.

 

This page is referenced by: