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Interpreting Science at Museums and Historic Sites

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Ask not what science can do for you, but what public history can do for science! Interpreting Science in Museums and Historic Sites stresses the untapped potential of historical artifacts to inform our understanding of scientific topics. It argues that science gains ground when contextualized in museums and historic sites. Engaging audiences in conversations about hot topics such as health and medical sciences or climate change and responses to it, mediated by a history museum, can emphasize scientific rigor and the time lag between discovery and confirmation of societal benefit. Interpreting Science emphasizes the urgency of this work, provides a toolkit to start and sustain the work, shares case studies that model best practice, and resources useful to facilitate and sustain a science-infused public history.
Debra A. Reid, PhD, is curator of agriculture and the environment at The Henry Ford (THF). She has experience with AASLH's "Interpreting History" series, as author of Interpreting Agriculture at Museums and Historic Sites (2017) and co-author with David D. Vail of Interpreting the Environment at Museums and Historic Sites (2019). She is a fellow of the Agricultural History Society, and has received numerous additional awards for her teaching, research, and service. Her books include Reaping a Greater Harvest: African Americans, Rural Reform and the Texas Extension Service (2007), Beyond Forty Acres and a Mule: African American Landowning Families since Reconstruction (co-edited with Evan P. Bennett, 2012), and essays in anthologies including Companion to U.S. Agricultural History (forthcoming 2022), Science as Service: Establishing and Reformulating American Land-Grant Universities, 1865-1930 (2015), the Routledge History of Rural America (2016), and Arkansas Women: Their Lives and Times (2018). Karen-Beth G. Scholthof, PhD, is professor of plant pathology and microbiology at Texas A&M University. She earned her undergraduate B.S. in Botany (and a minor in philosophy) at Montana State University, an M.S. in plant pathology (virology) from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and a PhD in plant pathology (virology) at the University of Kentucky. Her course "Pathogens, the Environment and Society" reflects her keen interest in bringing plant pathology, public health, environmental sciences and the humanities to students in science majors. She has published more than 100 peer-reviewed manuscripts and book chapters on molecular plant virology and host-virus interactions. She is an elected fellow of the American Phytopathological Society, the American Society for Microbiology and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. David D. Vail, PhD, has training in environmental history, science and technology, earning a PhD at Kansas State University. He is associate professor in the Department of History at the University of Nebraska at Kearney. Vail has worked with universities and humanities councils to spread the word about the intersection of policy, science, and agricultural production. He serves as book reviews editor for The Public Historian (National Council on Public History), conference selection committee for the American Society for Environmental History, and the editorial committee of Agricultural History. His award-winning book, Chemical Lands: Pesticides, Aerial Spraying, and Health in North America's Grasslands since 1945 (2018), is part of the University of Alabama Press' NEXUS Series: New Histories of Science, Technology, the Environment, Agriculture, and Medicine.
Contents Foreword Jill Tiefenthaler, Chief Executive Officer, National Geographic Society Preface by Karen-Beth G. Scholthof Acknowledgments Part I - Science, the Public Historian and Museum Collections Introduction Chapter 1: Communicating Climate Change with Archives of Nature and Archives of Societies by Sam White Chapter 2: Creating Public Space for Complex Conversations by Melanie Armstrong Chapter 3: (Re)constructing the Past: Research and Science Interpretation in Experimental Archeological Open-Air Museums by Claus Kropp Chapter 4: Local Weather, Distant Connections: Interpreting Meteorological Instruments and Data by Roger Turner Chapter 5: Medical Science Archives: Closer and More Accessible Than They Might Appear by April White and David D. Vail Part II - Science and the Human Experience Introduction Chapter 6: From Farm to Table: A One-Health Scenario by Karen-Beth G. Scholthof Chapter 7: Seeing the Museum in the Garden: Using Living History Museums to Teach the History of Plant Introductions by Emily Pawley Chapter 8: The Outdoor Life: Seeking the "Cure" in New Mexico by Karen-Beth G. Scholthof Chapter 9: "...In the Interest of the Health Conservation of the American Negro": National Negro Health Week, 1915-1951 by Cherisse Jones-Branch Chapter 10: Irrigation History: Moving Water from Colorado Mountain Peaks to Fruited Plain by Patricia Rettig Chapter 11: Exporting the "Wonders of Modern Science": Thinking Scientifically About Food Aid and Foreign Policy by Kristin Ahlberg Part III - Science: A Culture of Doubt? A Culture of Questioning Introduction Chapter 12: Reflecting on Uncomfortable Science by Aimee Slaughter Chapter 13: For Our Own Protection: On Black Gay Males and HIV/AIDS Activism by Jajuan S. Johnson Chapter 14: Becoming a Scientist: Untangling the Roles of Chemistry Sets by Debra A. Reid Chapter 15: The "Gene Gun" and Genetic Engineering: Unpacking the Science by Karen- Beth G. Scholthof and Debra A. Reid Chapter 16: Know your analyst, know your food? by Benjamin R. Cohen Chapter 17: Science and Progress in the Kitchen: Forks, Eggbeaters, and Sporks by Karen-Beth G. Scholthof and Debra A. Reid Part IV - Science and History Museum Education Introduction Chapter 18: Integrating Art and Science to Effectively Share Knowledge by Bethann Garramon Merkle Chapter 19: School Gardens and Edible Education by Debra A. Reid Chapter 20: A Yearbook of Science for the Public Good by David D. Vail Chapter 21: Interpreting Scientists: An Interview with Storyteller Brian "Fox" Ellis Chapter 22: Design, Science, and Driven to Win: A History Museum Addresses the Innovation Opportunity Gap by Robert Oleary and Matt Anderson Chapter 23: Exploring Science with Young Naturalists by Debra A. Reid Conclusion IDEAS: Inclusion, Diversity, Equity and Access to Science by Karen-Beth G. Scholthof Selected Readings Timeline Contributors Index
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