In my research for Common Touch, I have become more dutifully aware of the use of the word to “see” or “seeing” in our spoken and written language, particularly in terms of visual culture. Visual culture, disability studies, and literary scholars like Georgina Kleege and Julia Miele Rodas have explored the use and power of the word in our cultural history and in our lives today. As Rodas has noted, the sighted and those who are visually impaired are “acculturated into the same language.” It is hard, and in many cases nonsensical, to avoid sight-connoting signs like “to see” to describe non-visual experiences. (This post certainly contains them).
Consequently, a few months into the Common Touch project, I decided to do a title search in our catalog for the keyword “seeing.” And among the titles, I noticed this playbill. Within the promotional text, “Seeing the Elephant,” was highlighted. Upon further reading, I became aware that this was not an elephant act, but a minstrel production. And with further research, I realized the title came from a euphemism used during the 19th and early 20th centuries – one with a multi-layered history and origin.
“Seeing the elephant” appears to have first begun to be used as a euphemism in the mid-19th-century. It was applied to moments of either overwhelming excitement or dread, and was often documented in the lexicon of American pioneers describing their harrowing journeys westward. By the time of this playbill, the phrase had been co-opted to refer to Civil War soldiers’ horrific experiences on the battlefield. And, in turn, used as a referential title for a minstrel production during the war.
As I learned about the anecdotal history of “seeing the elephant,” given my internal musings about the word “seeing,” particularly in regard to the theme of “ways of knowing,” I found it ironic. In our visually-centric world, we who are not visually impaired often cling to “seeing is believing.” Yet, for a while, in our cultural heritage, our “seeing” something, an elephant, turned this notion on its head. Seeing was unbelieving in this instance. The individual experiencing the moment could not or did not want to believe what he was seeing. In the words of Kleege, “Human experience is not based on sight alone.”
Sources:
Georgina Kleege, “Blindness and Visual Culture: An Eyewitness Account” in Journal of Visual Culture 4 (2005) , 179-190
Julia Miele Rodas, “On Blindness” in Journal of Literary and Cultural Studies 3 (2009), 115-130
Erika Piola
Associate Curator, Prints and Photographs
Co-Director, VCP at LCP

![Section from playbill Grand Concert for the Benefit of George S. Morfeit, … Philadelphia : U.S. Job Print , 1863. Picture shows a close-up of a section of text from an 1863 playbill. Text reads from top to bottom: Part Second [next line].Overture, ---Orchestra. [next line]Comic Song,--- P. Williamson. [next line] Guitar Dnet [sic], ---Marion Brothers. Slight Skirmish: or, the Best Way to Settle It. [next line] George White and P. Williamson. [next line] Ethiopian Jig, - - - J. H. Barleur. [next line] Pathetic Ballad, - - - Billy Rose. [next line]. Seeing the Elephant, [next line] Hilfrem, Hirst and Burr. [next line] Comic Song - - - Ed Shaw [next line] Essence of Old Virginia, - - - J. H. Barluer [next line] [image of pointed finger] Black Blunders, [image of pointed finger] [next line] Geo. White and P. Williamson. [next line] Song and Dance, - - - Ed. Shaw [next line] Overture, - - - Orchestra. Text is surrounded by a rectangular-shaped border composed of two parallel black lines, one thick and one thin. [End of description]](https://commontouch.librarycompany.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/pb1863continental-25-5761-f-50b-d-300x156.jpg)

![Thomas Greene Bethune, known as Blind Tom, ca. 1870. Black & white photograph. 4 x 2.5 in. Picture depicts the carte-de-visite portrait photograph of musician Thomas Greene Bethune, later Wiggins, known as Blind Tom. Shows the young African American man from his waist up, his body slightly angled to the viewer’s right. His tightly curled hair is shortly cropped. His eyes are closed. He wears a white shirt with a turned down collar. Under the collar is a dark cross tie. He also wears a dark jacket with wide notch lapels, several creases around the waist, and the top button fastened. The photograph is framed within a rectangular shape printed with a thick gold line surrounded by a thin black line. The frame is on light-colored paper. The top edge of the frame is slightly rounded. Hand written text below the portrait reads: “Blind Tom” [End of description]](https://commontouch.librarycompany.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Thomas-Greene-Bethune-Blind-Tom-celebrities-album-80x80.jpg)
![Picture shows Kleege, slightly tilted to the left and slightly facing right. She has silver hair worn in bangs and cut to just below her ears. She wears a black, collarless shirt. [end of description]](https://commontouch.librarycompany.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Kleege_Georgina_0417-Copy_500-80x80.jpg)