Talk:1947 flying disc craze/Archive 1

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Notes/Todo

  • Handbook of UFO Religions source on 1947 scholarship
  • Flying Saucers in the Sky: 1947: when UFOs Came from Mars, potential resource
  • Folklore, not ufology. Always lists events in order of public reports, not supposed date of event.
  • Data visualization
  • Wikisource to Excel:
    • Copy text of table
    • Convert table row-breaks to newline with search/replace regex ^\|-[\s]*\n
    • Convert doublepipes to tabs with search/replace extended || to \t
    • Load in excel
    • Edit / Sort
    • Format dates to mmm d
    • Copy (not save) and paste inton notebook++
    • Covert newlines to pipedash with search/replace regex ^\|\s* to |-\n|
    • Convert tabs to doublepipes,extended search/replace \t to ||

Title brainstorm

  • 1947 UFO wave
    • Good: Common in 21st century literature
    • Bad: Unforgivably anachronistic ('UFO' term dates to the 1950s, never used in '47)
    • Bad: FRINGE (When historians use the term "Wave", it means "wave of reports" but readers will infer it to mean "wave of discs", implying the discs existed)
  • Flying disc craze of 1947 or 1947 flying disc craze
    • Good: historicity emphasize on behavior -- unambiguous that there was a craze in 47
    • Good: Explicitly anti-FRINGE: ("craze", not "wave")
    • Bad: Less common than the fringe-promoting titles
  • Other:
    • "Craze" and "Flap" were the 1940s terms, but "flap" in that sense is largely deprecated by 2022.
    • "Mass hysteria" and "mania" were also used, but those terms are long-deprecated in their technical sense. "Mania" the social phenom ala Beatlemania might be salvageable.

Feoffer (talk) 19:43, 2 June 2022 (UTC)