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The Bigger Picture: Visual Archives and the Smithsonian

Archive: 03/2012

Sneak Peek: 3/21/2012

by Marguerite Roby on March 21, 2012
B & O railroad station at Pier 8 in Baltimore, Maryland.
Categories: Collections in Focus
Tags: American History, Sneak Peek
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Fame ... By Any Other Name

by Marcel Chotkowski LaFollette on March 20, 2012

This is one of a series of posts written in celebration of Women's History Month, and profiling additions of new images of female scientists to the "Women in Science" set on the Smithsonian Flickr Commons. We invite you to subscribe to The Bigger Picture blog to keep up with new posts, and to help us identify some of the unidientified scientists in our "Women in Science" set.

How long does fame last? And is the foundation of scientific fame changing? Within science, professional reputations were traditionally built upon peer-reviewed publications or prizes. For those scientists who became celebrities—well-known to the general public, and interviewed in newspapers or on television—the construction of fame was a different, often collaborative activity, involving a cooperative (possibly ambitious) scientist and an eager journalist or broadcaster.

Margaret Mead (1901-1978), 1948, Smithsonian Institution Archives, SIA Acc. 90-105 [SIA2008-5981].Today, the peculiar combination of electronic evanescence and eternity found in cyberspace has changed the game. Scientists can cultivate fame proactively, setting up Twitter accounts and Facebook pages, and they can survive as cyber-celebrities after death.

Two scientists who achieved public fame in the twentieth century—Margaret Mead and Dixy Lee Ray—exemplify the curious manifestations of this latter situation. Both Mead and Ray were rarities in the circle of "visible scientists." In their day, the media tended to notice female scientists only if they won the Nobel Prize or were exotic, eccentric pathbreakers, comfortable in the spotlight and seemingly impervious to criticism.

Margaret Mead became a celebrity during the 1930s. The young, photogenic anthropologist, who analyzed adolescent sexuality among primitive tribes, understandably attracted journalistic attention. Mead could write accessible popular articles. She was relaxed before television cameras. When she lectured, she dominated the room.

Mead is well represented in the Smithsonian’s archival and art collections. However, in addition to such material culture, famous people can now retain "celebrity longevity" on the web. On the website of the American Museum of Natural History, where Mead worked for over fifty years, you can watch her walk through curatorial storage areas. And in 2011, to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Mead’s birth, the Library of Congress (which houses her papers) created an online exhibit about her life and work.

left to right: Dixy Lee Ray (1914-1994) and Glenn Theodore Seaborg (1912-1999), 1968, Smithsonian Institution Archives, SIA Acc. 90-105 [SIA2009-3053].Dixy Lee Ray offers a more complex example, in part because during mid-career she simmered in the hot spaces of national politics, yet lived a quieter life in her early and later decades.

After graduating from college, Ray taught in public schools and then, in 1942, entered a Stanford University PhD program and became a marine biologist. In 1963, after years of university teaching, Ray turned to public service, first as director of the Pacific Science Center and then, in 1972, on the US Atomic Energy Commission (AEC).

By 1974, she was so well known that she received a “Woman of the Year” award in the company of activist Dorothy Height, tennis star Billie Jean King, and actress Katherine Hepburn. Nevertheless, while at the AEC, Ray chose to live in a 28-foot motor home in suburban Maryland, with her deerhound and miniature poodle, hiking the nearby woods rather than engaging in the political high life.

In 1977, Ray became governor of Washington state. The Washington Post had called her an "unconventional anti-politician," "sometimes gruff, often outspoken, always colorful," and that tough nature did not always win political friends. She lost a reelection bid, under constant attack from environmentalists, in part for supporting nuclear energy as an alternative to fossil fuels.

After her death, Ray was included, along with Native American leaders Hazel Pete and Billy Frank, Jr., and musician Jimi Hendrix, in the Centralia College Clocktower Diversity Project. A rhododendron cultivar and a major environmental award have been named in her honor. Ray is represented within Smithsonian art and other collections and her speeches, too, can be watched on YouTube.

Will cyber-celebrity last forever? Is achieving online scientific fame now an egalitarian process? As a historian who has studied gender bias in how scientists appear in print, radio, and television, I cannot help but wonder whether the opportunities presented through modern social media might be a game-changer for female scientists, if they are willing to follow the paths blazed by Mead and Ray and to step boldly onto the cyber-stage.

Historian Marcel Chotkowski LaFollette is a Research Associate at the Smithsonian Institution Archives, and author of "Science on the Air: Popularizers and Personalities on Radio and Television." Her latest book, "Science on American Television: A History," will be published by the University of Chicago Press in Fall 2012.

Categories: Smithsonian History
Tags: Women’s History Month, Science, Archive
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See Here: 3/19/2012

by The Bigger Picture on March 19, 2012

Mineralogists at Work, by Unknown, 1969, Smithsonian Archives - History Div, 94-1533.

Categories: Collections in Focus
Tags: See Here, Science
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See Here: 3/16/2012

by The Bigger Picture on March 16, 2012

Emperor Akihito of Japan Visits the Smithsonian, by Minor-Penland, Laurie, 1994, Smithsonian Archives - History Div, 94-7023-9.

Categories: Collections in Focus
Tags: See Here, Science, Politics/Government
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Link Love: 3/16/2012

by Catherine Shteynberg on March 16, 2012

Shortsnout Scorpionfish X-Ray, 1908, Photo Sandra J. Raredon.

  • Have you seen the most recent Smithsonian Snapshot?: an xray of “Shorty,” a Shortsnout scorpionfish, and one of over four million fish in the National Museum of Natural History’s collections! Extra Credit: read our click! photography changes everything story by Jeff Williams, collections manager in the Smithsonian Division of Fishes, who explains how digital photography facilitates the identification of new species of fish and increases understanding of biodiversity.
  • The Library of Congress has introduced an interesting section on their website: Collections Ripe for Research. This area calls out “collections . . . selected because they merit scholarly attention but have so far received relatively little,” and encourages you to contact them about these collections through their Ask a Librarian feature [via INFOdocket].
  • The importance of information management via a clever series of movie metaphors [via Jennifer Wright, SIA].
  • The Center for the Future of Museums has jumped on the Pinterest bandwagon, and is asking for your help in contributing images to their “Inspirations for the Future of Museums” board. Read more and email them at emerritt@aam-us.org with your Pinterest name to participate.
  • A student at University of Michigan’s School of Information blogs about her Alternative Spring Break volunteer position at the Smithsonian Institution Archives, helping with the Field Book Project.
  • Seb Chan, of the Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, asks on his Fresh+New  blog how the amount born digital collections at an institution might change how much they integrate the ‘digital’ into their “organisational DNA,” and interesting conversation ensues.
  • Are you a geneaologist or researcher? The US National Archives prepares for the April 2, 2012, 9 a.m. EST digital launch of the 1940 census at 1940census.archives.gov. I’ve heard several researchers on the Smithsonian Flickr Commons chatting about this helpful, exciting release already:

Categories: What Gets Saved
Tags: American History, Science, Link Love, Field Book Project
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