From Archivist Katherine Christensen:
Aleš Hrdlička was an anthropologist who
left a complicated legacy. His work in physical anthropology was
groundbreaking, but his history is fraught with accusations of misogyny and a
belief that his work contributed to major racist ideologies of the 20th
century. His supporters argue that Hrdlička’s work should be read in the
context of his time, while his detractors argue that his views regarding
immigrants, people of color, and women were problematic even within his
cultural and temporal context. Both sides of the debate are so firm in their
stances that this archivist dare not venture her humble opinion. Instead, I
encourage you to form your own.
His papers are open for research at the
National Anthropological Archives and the finding aid for those papers, the
original creation of which was funded by the Repatriation Office, Department of
Anthropology, National Museum of Natural History (NMNH), is now available
digitally on SOVA
through recent funding from the FY2019 Collections Information (CIS) pool.
Photo: Anthropometric Measurements of
Franz Boas. National Anthropological
Archives, Aleš Hrdlička papers.
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From Curator Diana Marsh:
The exhibit was collaboratively produced by the National Anthropological Archives and Human Studies Film Archives, the Smithsonian Libraries, and Smithsonian Exhibits. It is located in the Evans Gallery on the Ground Floor of the NMNH and will be on view for 16 months.
Katherine Christensen and Diana Marsh
Some of Hrdlička’s work is on display in
the new exhibition, Documenting Diversity: How Anthropologists Record Human
Life, which will be on view at the National Museum of Natural History when
it reopens. In the exhibition, my co-curator, Joshua A. Bell,
and I featured aspects of Hrdlička’s work through displaying his project and
resulting book, The Old Americans, in which Hrdlička studied and compared anthropometric
differences—height, skull diameter, etc.—of those descended from colonial American
settlers and 20th century immigrants. From the archives, documents
for the project included in the exhibit are anthropometric sheets he
made of prominent members of the National Academy of Sciences including anthropologists
Franz Boas, Henry Fairfield Osborn, and Jesse Walter Fewkes, and famed
eugenicist Charles Benedict Davenport. This allowed us to show what
anthropometry methods look like without further objectifying Indigenous,
marginalized, or displaced peoples.
The exhibit was collaboratively produced by the National Anthropological Archives and Human Studies Film Archives, the Smithsonian Libraries, and Smithsonian Exhibits. It is located in the Evans Gallery on the Ground Floor of the NMNH and will be on view for 16 months.
Katherine Christensen and Diana Marsh
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