A visiting nephew called my attention to “Made in America”
( An informal history of the English Language in the United States) by
Bill Bryson (1994).
Three words, related to advertising campaigns in the late twenties
(the “era of anxiety”), were mentioned almost side by side, as they
appear in Pale Fire, where we find a round of TV advertising, movies and
programs, plus Shade’s bath soak (similar to Marat’s, who suffered
from “psoriasis” - as did Nabokov?). The other two are Gillette
razors and halitosis.
Although John Shade spends some of his time versifying about
adverts and brand terms, these are almost totally absent from Kinbote’s
commentary . Like Kinbote’s confusion between halitosis and hallucination.
On Halitosis: “In addition to the dread
of auto-intoxication, the American consumer faced a gauntlet of other newly
minted maladies – pyorrhea, halitosis (coined as a medical term
in 1874, but popularized by Listerine beginning in 1922 with the slogan “Even
your best friend won’t tell you” ). Athlete’s foot ( a
term invented by the makers of Absorbine Jr. in 1928), dead cuticles, scabby
toes, iron-poor blood, vitamin deficiency ( vitamin had been coined in
1912, but the word didn’t enter the general vocabulary until the 1920s,
when advertisers realized it sounded worryingly scientific), fallen stomach,
tobacco breath, and psoriasis, though Americans would have to wait until the
next decade for the scientific identification of the gravest of personal
disorders – body odor, a term invented in 1933 by the makers of
Lifebuoy soap.”…For deceased cuticles, ie, aunt Maud’s
scarf-skin (?) you could apply “Cutex”…
In connection to Gillette its creator King Gillette would
advertise: “ When you use my razor you are exempt from the dangers that
men often encounter who allow their faces to come in contact with brush, soap,
and barbershop accessories used on other people.” (the King lost most of
his money because he wanted to study and write about “the perfectibility
of mankind,” “’writing books of convoluted philosophy with
titles like The Human Drift.”)
Probably a lot more information about what scenes could be
presented while Sybil and Shade watched pirouetting nymphs on TV are to be
found in Bryson’s informative book. There’s even a reference to the
money spent on choosing brand names, as General Food’s “Dreamwhip”
and Ford’s “Edsel.”