Challenging Science as Usual: Women's Participation in American Natural History Museum Work, 1870-1950

Object Details

Date
Summer 2009
Author
Madsen-Brooks, Leslie
Subject
Rathbun, Mary Jane 1860-1943
Eastwood, Alice
Chase, Agnes 1869-1963
Maxwell, Martha
United States National Museum
United States National Museum Dept. of Marine Invertebrates
National Museum of Natural History (U.S.)
United States Dept. of Agriculture Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine
Category
Smithsonian History Bibliography
Summary
Discusses women scientists' attempts to challenge American science from within, to democratize it by making scientific knowledge accessible and its practice comprehensible to a broad audience. Author argues that natural history museums were important locations for understanding both the opportunities for and the barriers to women's professional engagement with the public understanding of natural science in the United States. From a feminist standpoint, explores the work of Martha Maxwell, taxidermist whose work was displayed at the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition; Mary Jane Rathbun, carcinologist or crab specialist at the U.S. National Museum; Agnes Chase, botanist for the U.S. Department of Agriculture stationed at the Smithsonian's U.S. National Herbarium; and botanist Alice Eastwood, who worked at the Academy of
Contained within
Journal of Women's History Vol. 21, No. 2 (Journal)
Contact information
Institutional History Division, Smithsonian Institution Archives, 600 Maryland Avenue, SW, Washington, D.C. 20024-2520, SIHistory@si.edu
Place
United States
Topic
Carcinology
Women Scientists
Women--Employees
Women
Women--History
Museums--History
Museums
Data Source
Smithsonian Archives - History Div
Physical description
Number of pages: 29; Page numbers: 11-38
Record ID
siris_sic_13527