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"The world is really so surreal these days that it's necessary for us to blunt it somehow in order to stay sane. The artist functions to short-circuit the buffering mechanism, so that people can occasionally perceive the weirdness of things as they are."
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This is a very early use of this term, but it would soon be (in 1929) a commercial device.
Here's another use, from Exiles of the Moon, a 1931 Schachner and Zagat story:
It's also referred to as a "visor screen":
Compare to the gogglelike televisors from The Robot and the Lady (1938) by Manly Wade Wellman, the selective television from The Challenge of Atlantis (1938) by Arthur J. Burks and the telescreen from 1984 (1948) by George Orwell.
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