Imagineering

Imagineering is a portmanteau combining the words "imagination" and "engineering". Imagineering is the implementing of creative ideas into practical form.

The word is well known for its use within the name of Walt Disney Imagineering; however, contrary to popular belief, the term was neither coined by Disney, nor did it originate there. The word was "invented" by Alcoa around 1940, and appeared widely in numerous publications of several disciplines such as urban design, geography and politics, evolutionary economics, corporate culture and futures studies.

Earliest usage

Alcoa's 1942 advertisement of "The Place They Do Imagineering"

Following World War II, Alcoa created an internal "Imagineering" program to encourage innovative usage of aluminum in order to keep up demand.[1]

A Time magazine ad from February 16, 1942, titled "The Place They Do Imagineering" relates the origin,

For a long time we've sought a word to describe what we all work at hard here at Alcoa... IMAGINEERING is the word... Imagineering is letting your imagination soar, and then engineering it down to earth.[2]

Other notable pre-Disney usages include an October 24, 1942 mention in the New York Times in an article titled "Christian Imagineering," a 1944 Oxford English Dictionary entry which cites an advertisement from the Wall Street Journal, and the use by artist Arthur C Radebaugh to describe his work, which was mentioned in the article "Black Light Magic" in the Portsmouth Times, Portsmouth, Ohio, 1947.

Other early usage includes Richard F Sailer's 1957 article "BRAINSTORMING IS IMAGINation enginEERING" written for the National Carbon Company Management Magazine, and reprinted by the Union Carbide Company.

WED Enterprises applied for a trademark for the term in 1967, claiming first use in 1962.


See also


Other uses

"Imagineering" has also been used by:

References

  1. Bykon, Maureen (November 2000). "Aluminum Exhibits Its Versatility in Art, Life". JOM.
  2. "The Place They Do Imagineering". Time. 1942-02-16. p. 59.
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