Posts Tagged ‘Commonweal’

For Further Reading

Posted by

I noted yesterday that the papal nuncio had cited–not approvingly, I hasten to add–a post from DotCommonweal that addressed the issue of religious freedom as well as the relationship between the bishops and the laity with respect to matters of public policy.

It occurred to me later that the Archbishop Viganò might benefit from reading other pieces in the magazine that deal with these issues, particularly Commonweal’s symposium from earlier this year that responded to the U.S. bishops’ statement Our First, Most Cherished Liberty.  The symposium featured comments from Peter Steinfels, William Galston and Cathleen Kaveny just to name a few.

I was thinking of offering some thoughts on the Archbishop’s address, but I don’t think I can improve on what the panel has already written.  So I will refrain.

“An expansive feeling of gaeity”


One reason I enjoy dipping into the Commonweal archives is to look at the ads. I have long been fascinated by magazine advertisements from the first half of the twentieth century (and earlier). I love the combination of hand-drawn art and hand-set type. I love how print ads from the 1950s and earlier are filled to bursting with irony-free copy — who wanted to read all that? I love the window they provide on the culture they were designed for. And, perhaps most of all, I love the juvenile laughs I sometimes get from their use of contemporary slang. If you’ll indulge me, then, something fun for the weekend…

In the 1950s, the candle-making company Will & Baumer had a regular spot facing the table of contents in The Commonweal for its comparatively art-heavy half-page ads. Most of these advertisements extolled the virtues of their various liturgical candles and candle accessories, designed to meet every conceivable worship need. (In one, there’s a great image of an acolyte using what looks like a miniature blowtorch to light tapers suspended above his head.) But they also encouraged consumers to integrate candles more fully into their secular household routines. Candlelight, as any 1950s homemaker knew, is naturally conducive to wholesome family values… Or is it? This is from an ad that ran in the April 23, 1954 issue of The Commonweal:

Make it gay

If you can’t make out the small text, it says:

Whether the occasion be an informal supper, a Coke party for the youngsters, or a formal dinner, the dining table becomes the social axis of the scene.

Make it gay, inviting, friendly with Taperlights: Simple decorations that add a festive note, that lift the plainest menu to the emotional level of a grand occasion. Taperlights provide the light beauty and romance to capture young imaginations… encourage an expansive feeling of gaiety, and compete with the artfully contrived atmosphere of commercialized entertainment.

Well, I never! (Complete ad, and another fun excerpt, after the jump…)
Read the rest of this entry »

Free e-newsletter

More Information