petri dish

flotsam and jetsam and historical memories

Ufo mcmillen 1953: Midnight Fireball Hits Bay -- UFO Near Miss???? No, the image isn't a real historic boardwalk handbill from Antiques Roadshow but one more bit of McMilleniana (as are the ones below and to the right) -- they're actually banners made in 2004 for the Santa Monica Pier in California for a public art project that took its inspiration from "the facts, folklore, myths, and legends of the Pier's early history," with the imagesSquid mcmillen "representing historical events that may -- or may not-- have actually occurred." McMillen's banners, along with those of artist Steve Galloway, were printed on vinyl and hung out on light poles on the boardwalk, flickering in and out of view of visitors as they strolled along the Pier entertaining themselves. (There are more than two dozen, and each one of them is really fun and clever... very much in keeping with a characterization that McMillen used in another context about an art project of his: "all part of an open-ended narrative, a carnival for the curious.")

My third take-away lesson from the world of art for myself as an historian of science (there is a first one -- "trying to make the (seemingly) ephemeral visible". . . and a second one -- "of crocodelephants and category confusions") as seen through the envisionings of Los Angeles artists Sam Rodia and Michael C. McMillen is related to the idea of artistic installations: art in the wild, out in the public square. McMillen's banners for the Pier are an exuberant wave of the hand, inviting those who encounter them to take them in -- maybe do a double-take -- and respond as might be, maybe with amusement or bemusement, or in sparking off a train-of-associations, or drifting in and out of a game of detecting how close to historical reality the "commemorative" homages are. 

The artist initiates a conversation, drawing on the representations and forms and idioms of everyday life, and provides an opportunity for engagement in a way that brings the specialist or expert (the artist) into an inviting -- if brief -- relationship with ordinary folk, casual passers-by. The Pier's visitors didn'tUnderwater mcmillen have to possess the right connections to enter the home of a wealthy collector who owns an artpiece only seen by invitation, or even to venture into a museum gallery that is the art world's home turf: here, installation art, as public art in its most open form, takes up residence within a commonplace that offers the possibility for an interplay between "experts" and "laity" in a way that neither condescends nor intimidates. The third lesson, then, is of how venturing out beyond professional confines has so much potential: of teaching ourselves as we improvise new forms of communication, in ways that offer different kinds of connections and opportunities for imagination and reflection. And that's why I'm here on the web, diving into the area of science and popular culture, trying to figure out how to be a digital historian of science: putting out a few banners to fly in the public square. Its time to learn how to do history of science in the wild, not simply caretake it within the neatly trimmed hedges and rows of academic propriety.

McMillen's banners are also a wonderful nudge in and of themselves to speculate about the flotsam and jetsam of science and popular culture. UFOS streaking down into the sea, giant squid breaking the surface and upending an unwary boater, late-Victorian submarine steamers illuminating the murky depths: they're all wonderful evocations of the idea of mysteries that lurk so often at the heart of popular culture phenomena, with the ocean being a particularly apt emblematic prompt. In fact these three "historical" posters offer more than just apt symbolic representations of recurring popular symbols -- they intersect with real artifacts as well, in which connecting the dots begins to reveal possible patterns of culture. If not a real-world UFO sighting, well there was the 1953 movie, Phantom from Space ("Million Monkey Theater" provides a sharp narrative and commentary) in which an alien being crashes into the ocean off of Santa Monica. Jules Verne, in the 1870 novel 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, gives us both a Victorian submersible and a giant squid, featured as well in the 1954 film by Disney. Off the coast of Santa Monica you can spy Catalina Island twenty-seven miles away, where (as the locals tell it) the glass-bottom boat was invented in the late-19th century to take advantage of the clear waters and abundant sealife as a novel tourist attraction-- not quite the gothic hulk of McMillen's imagining, but in 1906 you could experience a variant of the Vernian aquatic dreamscape by touring Catalina's "undersea gardens" via glass-bottom boat. Of course, Catalina being a tinsel-town playground, the tourist craft gets its own star treatment in the Doris Day movie from 1966, The Glass Bottom Boat (with Day as a NASA employee and occasional mermaid...there are interesting images of scientists to consider in this comic film). With just this brief tour, we've probably discovered at least a couple of relevant items worthy of study that are historical obscurities for most by now.

It's unlikely that a rampaging squid actually tormented a bay-dweller in 1949 as recorded on the second banner, but Hollywood, just down the road, produced The Lady Takes a Sailor that year with Jane Wyman (directed by Michael Curtiz) where an octopus apparently figures into the narrative, although it's an underwater vehicle that breaks the surface and upends her sailboat -- and, interestingly, just two years post-Roswell, the plot features a government cover-up of secret experiments (extending to messing with civilians' heads and reputations) involving a submarine tractor (bringing together, in a loose but ever more thickly woven web, echoes of ufology, troublesome cephalopods, and novel deepsea machines :-) Of course, nasty squids/octopi received iconic treatment at the movies during the cold war period in Disney's 20,000 Leagues and It Came from Beneath the Sea ("it" being a six-armed octopus that attacked San Francisco, courtesy of Ray Harryhausen) from 1955 and in the 1961 Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, directed by Irwin Allen (I actually saw one of these as a kid -- I think the third one -- at Catalina's movie theater at the Avalon Casino, after having had my first tour in a glass-bottom boat. . . I can still see the vague form of a giant octopus in my mind's-eye today, it scared me that much!). Of course, giant squid are among the most durable popular culture themes and are still a big draw, being that they're so elusive -- they were only recently caught live on video in 2005.

A fascinating late-19th century California seaside connection is a science fiction short story that appeared in a periodical called The Californian in December of 1893. Entitled "A Submarine Christmas" [via Google Books], the fantastic tale by Thomas R. Caldwell shamelessly draws from Verne, but is a surprisingly fresh and up-to-date look for its time at marine zoology. The plot involves an inventor of a submarine research vessel who travels to Avalon Bay at Catalina Island to test it out, and of his intrepid friend from the East Coast who joins him for assorted undersea adventures, including a near-fatal encounter with a "giant cuttle-fish (Architeuthis), a monster at least seventy feet in length. . . Its arms were thrown about the boat: its uncanny black eyes glowing like huge plates in the glare of the search lights" (accompanied by an excellent illustration). Fortunately for the harried explorers, it was all a dream! But the 1906 piscatorial machine of the Santa Monica Pier banner would look remarkably apt as an illustration for the 1893 story; certainly Thomas R. Caldwell would have felt right at home! And, again, we've probably discovered at least a couple of relevant items here that are historical obscurities for most by now, simply by using the 2004 banner imaginings by McMillen as jumping-off points.

Making the (seemingly) ephemeral visible is part of what the art world can teach us humanists, and artists can also inspire ideas about how to visualize a carnival for the curious -- experimenting outside the petri dish -- needed, especially, when humanism becomes tinged with scientism. Not only that, but they can send us off into cultural scavenger hunts that turn flotsam and jetsam into useful things to think with and that point toward historical work that needs doing.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Images: All from the image gallery at http://arts.santa-monica.org/gallery/paintings/PierBanners/.

June 19, 2008 in Childhood and Science, Film, Internet, Nature and Culture, Popular Culture in General, Science Fiction, Scientific Images | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: history of science

hello, spring '07 scipopsters!

Hot_chocolate Despite a three-day ice storm that left us in dire straits during the first week of classes, we are up and running here at OU, and that means I have the privilege of welcoming a new group of students to hsci 1133 -- "Science and Popular Culture" -- for spring '07! When the class is in session for the spring semester, "petri dish" is a blog that tracks along with the syllabus, more or less (sometimes more, sometimes less!) with the topics we'll be covering in class. (In the off-season it tends to wander around a bit more idiosyncratically.) I'll post around once a week or so, and you'll find links to aspects of the class that we may have just finished or that may be coming up, along with commentary and additional coverage -- that way you can dip in a bit more fully to those parts of our work that you find particularly interesting. Also feel free to use petri dish as a kind of incubator for ideas for your individual projects . .  . it may help you discover possibilities you wouldn't have run across otherwise. And please, feel free to leave comments whenever the spirit moves you!

Poindexter We've started off with some cartoon images of science and scientists -- first an episode from Felix the Cat in 1959 featuring "Poindexter" the child genius scientist nerd. Poindexter, surrounded by a massive amount of laboratory hardware, shrinks Felix down to pipette size, siphons him up and squirts him under a microscope, from Pinky_and_the_brainwhence mayhem ensues, mad-scientist style, until Poindexter manages one explosion too many, propelling himself into the bulbous end of a retort (rather like putting the scientific-genie-run-amok back into the bottle). In fact, the name "Poindexter" was used to taunt scientific nerds in the aftermath of the 1950s Felix cartoons, and was picked up later as well. [You can launch the episode -- "Felix Baby-sits" -- on the beta site for google video.] Skipping a generation or so we'll compare a 1996 episode of Pinky and the Brain ("Leave it to Beavers") to see what's old or new in the evil genius scientist genre for children's viewing pleasure. "The Brain" doesn't have a white lab coat like Poindexter, but then he's a white laboratory rat (that's been 'genetically spliced'!), so that ups the ante in the scientific icon sweepstakes, I would think :-) Pinky and the Brain reside in a cage at ACME labs, an offshoot of the Acme products featured in my favorite Loony Tunes cartoon, the Roadrunner. (Now Wile E. Coyote and the Roadrunner aren't strictly relevant to the matter at hand, although there is a whole interesting scipop realm to explore in terms of the cartoon laws of physics. The Coyote often exemplified the 1st law: "Any body suspended in space will remain in space until made aware of its situation." You can find out more here.]

In honor of our local frosty weather conditions, I'll leave you with a scientific puzzler (another genre of pop science), brought to you via NewScientist's Short Sharp Science Blog. The entry for January 17th, "Do Try This At Home...," explores the mystery of the "hot chocolate effect". Here's the deal:

[try] tapping a teaspoon against the bottom of a mug containing freshly-stirred hot chocolate. What’s so startling is that the tapping sound rises in pitch by nearly three octaves.

So, why does this happen? Sad to say, I didn't come up with the correct answer. Although it turns out that pop culture columnist Cecil Adams (in "The Straight Dope") shared the answer back in 1985. So whip up some hot cocoa and amaze your friends with your scientific savvy --  but don't be surprised if they think you're a real Poindexter!
---------------------------------------------------------------------
For more: Felix the Cat goes back to the era of silent movies, and there's more history -- with Felix at the dawn of television in 1928 -- on the official website for the later cartoons. For another interesting sci fi-themed Felix episode, take a look at the one introducing "The Master Cylinder" -- a strange disembodied brain [there's that brain thing again] within a giant steel cylinder that is one nefarious piece of technology: Like the episode mentioned above, "The Master Cylinder -- King of the Moon" can also can be launched at the google video beta site. For a bit of Pinky and the Brain, youtube has the theme song and a short bit where the mousely duo sing the parts of the brain and demonstrate the locations via an old-fashioned pointer and slides in the somewhat-catchy tune, "Brainstem." You can get a bit more of their backstory and other tidbits at the DVD website for P&tB from Warner Bros.
Images: The steaming beverage at top left is from the wikipedia page for hot chocolate. Poindexter is from the "Felix's Friends" page of the official website at http://www.felixthecat.com/friends-poindexter.htm.The Pinky and the Brain picture is from the vhs box for the episode "Cosmic Attractions.".

January 22, 2007 in Childhood and Science, Science Fiction, Scientific Images | Permalink | Comments (0)

halloween treats

Bat Here are some history of science treats for fun, inspired by Halloween sneaking up around the corner. To get in the proper spirit, visit the skeleton carnival over at Dream Anatomy, the graphically elegant, evocative, eruditSkeletone, and sometimes disturbing, sometimes droll display of what's beneath the skin. This is put together by the National Library of Medicine from their collections, particularly rich in the Renaissance and early modern period. The introduction begins by noting that:

The interior of our bodies is hidden to us. What happens beneath the skin is mysterious, fearful, amazing. In antiquity, the body's internal structure was the subject of speculation, fantasy, and some study, but there were few efforts to represent it in pictures. The invention of the printing press in the 15th century -- and the cascade of print technologies that followed -- helped to inspire a new spectacular science of anatomy, and new spectacular visions of the body. Anatomical imagery proliferated, detailed and informative but also whimsical, surreal, beautiful, and grotesque — a dream anatomy that reveals as much about the outer world as it does the inner self.

You can start with the introduction in the link above, or go straight to Cadavers at Play or Show-off Cadavers if you don't need to ease into touring dissected bodies. (The image here is from a 1690 book with Govard Bidloo as the anatomist and Gerard de Lairesse as the illustrator.)

Since Halloween conjures up a medieval vibe (although the great witch-hunts and such belong to the early modern era, not the middle ages, despite popular belief), it gives me an excuse here to point out the wonderful digital version of the 12th-century Aberdeen Bestiary, which provides the wonderful illuminated bat picture at the start of this entry. Magic and wizardry also calls to mind Harry Potter -- and "real science", history of science and mythology mixes together with the popular series in The Science of Harry Potter: How Magic Really Works by Roger Highfield. And, for the serious history of science student with a research library at hand and a yen to study the intersection of history of science and the occult, a good place to start is with U of Florida Professor Robert Hatch's bibliography on magic, mysticism, and the occult, from his Scientific Revolution website. (This isn't to say that Harry Potter hasn't been to college; Professor of Physics George Plitnik at Frostburg State has taught Harry Potter science, in wizard robes, no less, as CBS reported.)

History of science does have a few ghosts, witches, and monsters in the attic. The ur-monster of all, of course, is MGhost_huntersary Shelley's Frankenstein, and the Bakken Libary and Museum (which focuses on the history of electricity and magnetism in the life sciences) has an online companion to their Frankenstein exhibit. Science writer Deborah Blum takes on "real" ghost stories in her latest book, Ghost Hunters: William James and the Scientific Proof for Life after Death. Johannes Kepler, astronomer extraordinaire, had to take time out to defend his mother in a witchcraft trial; the story is nicely retold in Kitty Ferguson's book, Tycho and Kepler. Kepler also has a character that resembles his herbal-knowledgeable mother in his Somnium (The Dream), which was published after his death in 1634. Kepler's tale concerns a young man who journeys to the moon in a dream, assisted by his mother, a witch (some consider this to be one of the first works of science fiction. For an analysis, see this piece by Gale E. Christianson in Science Fiction Studies, Kepler's Somnium: Science Fiction and the Renaissance Scientist).

Happy haunting!

---------------------------------------------

October 21, 2006 in Books, Nature and Culture, Science Fiction, Scientific Images | Permalink | Comments (0)

Subscribe to this blog's feed

SciPop Home

  • scipop link

About

My Photo

Recent Posts

  • watching the detectives
  • a big hello to this year's scipop students!
  • science in the everyday world
  • arrows to atoms: 1957 and all that
  • flotsam and jetsam and historical memories
  • of crocodelephants and category confusions
  • trying to make the (seemingly) ephemeral visible
  • science fairs and what you can find there
  • half a moon is better than none
  • the beasts and the birds will teach thee

Second Looks

  • amen and evolution
  • erector sets, anyone?
  • wondering about wonder

Categories

  • Books
  • Childhood and Science
  • Cold War
  • Film
  • Internet
  • Museums
  • Nature and Culture
  • Oklahoma
  • Political Issues
  • Popular Culture in General
  • Religion
  • Science Fiction
  • Scientific Images
  • Television

Exploring Further

  • the missing link
  • the loom
  • the end of cyberspace
  • science musings
  • sci tech daily review
  • old is the new new
  • npr: science friday
  • new scientist: short sharp science blog
  • lab lit
  • echo: collecting center
  • distillations
  • common-place
  • adventures in ethics and science

Archives

  • February 2009
  • January 2009
  • September 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2007
  • February 2007
  • January 2007
  • November 2006
Blog powered by TypePad