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Densa was originally a fictional association created in parody of Mensa International. Rather than belonging to the smartest 2% of the population (the criteria for membership eligibility for Mensa), members of Densa must be in the stupidest 98%.[1][2][3][4][5] However, in contrast to the implied aims of Densa, one group - the Densa Special Interest Group (Densa SIG), in fact requires Mensa membership.[citation needed] In its current form it has existed since April 2007.[citation needed]

The concept of an organization for the mentally dense originated in "Boston & Outskirts Mensa Bulletin (BOMB)", August, 1974, in "A-Bomb-inable Puzzle II" by John D. Coons. The puzzle involved "The Boston chapter of Densa, the low IQ society." Subsequent issues had additional puzzles with gags about the group, and were widely reprinted by the bulletins of other Mensa groups, before the concept of a low IQ group gained wider circulation in the 1970s, with other people creating quizzes, etc.[6]

A humor book called the The Densa Quiz: The Official & Complete Dq Test of the International Densa Society was written in 1983 by Stephen Price and J. Webster Shields.[7][8]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Boxer, Sarah (1999-11-13). "What's the Opposite of a Tree? Ask the Testers at Mensa's Gate.". The New York Times. pp. B13. "There is a special club for those who don't make it into Mensa, the high IQ society. It is called Densa (really)." 
  2. ^ Queenan, Joe (1989-03-28). "You Wanna Be a Wacko, You Gotta Pay the Dues.". The Wall Street Journal (Eastern edition). pp. 1. "Says Densa is one of many groups who are "the wacko patrol: the daffy, satirical organizations that never fail to tickle our funny bone with their zany antics."" 
  3. ^ Ward, Bruce (1999-05-17). "At Last: Mensa for Dummies". The Ottawa Citizen.  Available on Lexis-Nexis.
  4. ^ Fisher, Sophie (1982-01-29). "Think You're Dumb? Densa Will Help You Find Joy in Stupidity". The Globe and Mail.  Available through Lexis-Nexis.
  5. ^ "Genius is as Genius Does". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. 1995-01-17.  Available through Lexis-Nexis.
  6. ^ Amyx, Meredy; Edited by TJ Lundeen (June/July 2005). "The Origin of Densa". Interloc, a publication of American Mensa, Ltd.. http://www.metaphoricaldwelling.com/MetaDwelSite/Rants/index.html#densatag. Retrieved 2007-06-28. 
  7. ^ Price, Stephen; J. Webster Shields (December 1983). The Densa Quiz: The Official & Complete Dq Test of the International Densa Society. Avon Books. p. 64. ISBN 978-0380855636. 
  8. ^ McGowan, William (1987-08-23). "A Sense of Belonging". The New York Times. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=956947011&sid=6&Fmt=2&clientId=76566&RQT=309&VName=PQD. Retrieved 2007-06-28. Not available through New York Times archival service, but available through Proquest.

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