![]() Marston was an experimental psychologist who developed a theory of emotions. According to his theory, the four basic emotions were Dominance, Compliance, Inducement, and Submission. The real story behind Wonder Woman’s magic lasso is much more interesting and much stranger. And because Wonder Woman used it to extract confessions and compel obedience, the golden lasso was of course nothing less than a lie detector.” (Bunn 1997, p. “Anyone caught in the lasso found it impossible to lie. Here’s Geoffrey Bunn, one of the few historians of psychology to write in detail about Marston: It’s a tempting connection to make Marston, after all, invented the lie detector test, or at least, he’s one of its most recognizable developers and proponents. It’s a common and tempting connection to draw: And its power has nothing specific to do with the truth, but rather with compelling obedience. Marston called this iconic element of Wonder Woman’s gear the “Magic Lasso” or sometimes “Golden Lasso,” not the lasso of truth. What’s the problem here? Isn’t it called “the Lasso of Truth?” The problem, as Brian Cronin pointed out a couple of years ago at Comic Book Resources, is that this is actually anachronistic. The accompanying text that connects this work to lie detectors and Marston’s work on deception is ultimately misleading, however. ![]() She repeats the point in one of the color plates in the middle of the book, which does show Wonder Woman compelling a thug to tell the truth. “She had a magic lasso anyone she roped had to tell the truth”(xi). So far, I’m finding it to be really thorough and excellent! I was a little disturbed, though, to discover that on the first page of the preface, Lepore makes a basic mistake about one of the key features of the early Wonder Woman comics: I’ve just begun reading Jill Lepore’s new book about Wonder Woman and William Moulton Marston.
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