104
S C A T T E R B R A I N E D
1770:
Captain Cook returns from
a voyage to the South Pa-
cifi c with a unique souvenir: a tattooed Polynesian named
Omai. He’s an overnight sensation in fad-crazy London and
starts a tattooing trend among upper-class poseurs. Between
passionate declarations that he is “not an animal” Omai also
manages to introduce the word
tattoo
into
our Western lexi-
con, from the Tahitian
tatau,
“to mark.”
1802:
By now, tattooing has caught on with sailors through-
out the Royal Navy, and there are tattoo artists in almost every
British port. Especially popular are Crucifi xion scenes, tattooed
on the upper back to discourage fl ogging by pious superiors.
1891:
American Samuel O’Reilly “borrows” Edison’s electric
pen design to patent a nearly identical machine that tattoos.
(Way to stand
on the shoulders of giants, Sam.) Its basic de-
sign—moving coils, a tube, and a needle bar—is still used to
today, so remember, kids: Th
at’s 19th-century technology
they’re repeatedly stabbing you with.
1919:
Th
e troublemaker protagonist of Franz Kafka’s short
story “In the Penal Colony” fi nally
gets the law drilled into
him—literally—by its fatal, 12-hour inscription into his skin
.
1955:
Robert Mitchum makes the tattoo cool again in the
movie
Night of the Hunter,
playing
a sociopathic traveling
preacher with “love” and “hate” inked on his knuckles. Popu-
lar modern variants include “rock/roll” and “love/math.”
1961:
Hepatitis B makes the tattoo not cool again, an out-
break of which is linked to tattoo parlors in New York City.
Parlors are outlawed in the Big Apple until 1997.
2005:
Pop culture helps tattoos become more popular in the
West than at any time in recorded history, with more than 39
million North Americans sporting one. It all comes back to
Austrian Ötzi and his 57 tattoos. It might’ve taken almost
105
6,000 years, but tattooing and the West are in love again. And
speaking of history’s great reunions . . .
10
Get ting Put Back Together Again:
Great Reunions
Perhaps no reunion of the 20th century had been more hotly
anticipated than that of East and West Germany in 1990; over-
joyed Berliners tearing down
the wall that separated them
has become the icon for the
end of the Cold War. And at
fi
rst everything was roses.
Families caught on both sides
of the Iron Curtain were re-
united,
and the East German
state held the fi rst and only
free elections in its history, the
major mandate of which was
to dissolve the East German
state. But nearly 20 years later,
the honeymoon is over; former
East and West are bickering
about what most married cou-
ples bicker about: money. High
unemployment,
the failure of
Soviet-era industries, and un-
checked migration out of East
Germany is costing West Ger-
many upwards of €100 billion
in aid annually.
Republics
Behaving Badly:
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