Sunday, February 19, 2012

From the Great Beyond: The Museum of Talking Boards

And what, you're probably asking, is a talking board?  It's a category of games that includes Ouija Boards and all other game boards that purport to answer any question we ask of them.  As a child I was told that these types of games were tools of the devil, so I know next to nothing about them.  And while I maintain a healthy skepticism about the power of these games, it was interesting to learn about them, even from an obviously biased source.

The introductory screen of the Museum of Talking Boards is rather off-putting, because it consists of a large block of text with only one link to the museum's content.  You have to navigate through the museum's site map to find everything on the website, and many of the sections here are also word-dense.  You might not want to read everything, but you can glean plenty of interesting nuggets of information.  There's Ouija Board lore, for example, as well as a history of talking boards in the movies and a description of their "therapeutic" uses.

The best section of the museum is the gallery of boards.  Here you can find images of dozens of boards from the past, each with information on when it was made and the company that manufactured it.  For some of the boards you can view larger images along with a more detailed description.  This section is nice because it not only illustrates the museum's content but also places these boards in a historical context.

I wish, though, that the museum was more objective.  I guess it's almost inevitable that a museum devoted to Ouija Boards would slant in favor of their supposed powers, and indeed this one believes in them so much that there it includes information on how to use and care for talking boards.  The only nod to disbelief is an article on automatism (the idea that unconscious hand motions control the board's message indicator) and how it stacks up to the ideas of spiritualists.

So although the Museum of Talking Boards is quite interesting and can help answer some questions for those of use who are unfamiliar with talking boards, I wouldn't recommend it for those seeking concrete answers.  Psychologists have addressed automatism and its relation to our subconscious in countless research studies.  Those might make a nice companion to viewing this museum, bringing together a history of modern spiritualism with a rational explanation of how talking boards work.

Museum of Talking Boards
Wensite:  www.museumoftalkingboards.com

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