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Chemistry in the mail: Stamps from around the globe and public science communication in the twentieth century.
Krall, Madison A; Parks, Melissa M; Krebs, Emily; Mann, Benjamin W; Maison, Kourtney; Jensen, Robin E.
Affiliation
  • Krall MA; University of Utah, USA.
  • Parks MM; University of California, Santa Barbara, USA.
  • Krebs E; University of Utah, USA.
  • Mann BW; Eastern Oregon University, USA.
  • Jensen RE; University of Utah, USA.
Public Underst Sci ; 31(2): 136-151, 2022 02.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34319183
ABSTRACT
Postage stamps are designed to convey messages that reverberate symbolically with broad swaths of the public, and their content has been employed as a window into how members of the public understand the ideas represented therein. In this rhetorical analysis, we analyze Philadelphia's Science History Institute's Witco Stamp Collection, which features 430 stamps from countries around the globe dating from 1910 to 1983, to identify how chemistry is portrayed in this ubiquitous medium. We find the vernacular of science reflected and supported by these images functions to (a) define chemistry in terms of its invisibility and abstraction; (b) uphold chemical operations as instrumental and daedal, or exceptional, in nature; and (c) delineate practitioners of chemistry as-on the whole-privileged and preternatural. Our findings reveal some of the overarching communicative tools made available to twentieth-century non-experts for articulating chemistry as an enterprise and reveal how those tools positioned chemistry in terms of values related to opacity and exclusivity.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Philately / Postal Service Type of study: Prognostic_studies Language: En Journal: Public Underst Sci Journal subject: CIENCIA / HISTORIA DA MEDICINA Year: 2022 Document type: Article Affiliation country: United States

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Philately / Postal Service Type of study: Prognostic_studies Language: En Journal: Public Underst Sci Journal subject: CIENCIA / HISTORIA DA MEDICINA Year: 2022 Document type: Article Affiliation country: United States