Rainmaking
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rainmaking refers to the act of attempting to artificially induce or increase precipitation, usually to stave off drought. It takes two basic forms:
- In the US, rainmaking was attempted by traveling showmen. It was practiced in the old west but may have reached a peak during the dust bowl/drought of the American West and Midwest in the 1930's. The practice was depicted in the 1956 film The Rainmaker. The attempt to bring rain directly has waned with development of the science of meteorology, the advent of laws against fraud and increased communication technology. However many Americans, well-educated and not, still attempt to bring rain during droughts through prayer, a phenomenon particularly common in US farming regions.
- In other societies, rain dances and other rituals have similarly been attempted supernaturally to increase rainfall. Though there is no scientific basis for the belief that this worked, the rituals persist, with the Romanian ceremony known as paparuda - and many others across the world - continuing to the present day. These rituals in America and beyond differ greatly in their specifics, but share a common concern with bringing rain through ritual and/or spiritual means.
- Since the 1940s, cloud seeding has been used to change the structure of clouds by dispersing substances into the air, potentially increasing or altering rainfall.
- Operation Popeye was a US military rainmaking operation to increase rains over Vietnam during the Vietnam War in order to slow Vietnamese military truck activity in the region.
See also: cloud-buster.
The term is also used metaphorically to describe the process of bringing new clients into a professional practice such as law, architecture or consulting.
ADDITIONAL READINGS
Sanders, Todd 2008. Beyond Bodies: Rainmaking and Sense Making in Tanzania. Toronto, University of Toronto Press