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Monday, October 9, 2006
The Decline of the Natural-History Museum
By Thomas H. Benton
Sometimes I wonder whether I have chosen the wrong profession.
How many English professors, after all, have a 6-foot-long reproduction of
Rudolph Zallinger's The Age of Reptiles mural from Yale's Peabody Museum
hanging in their home office above cabinets full of fossils, butterflies,
and seashells?
As a child, I was, like many kids, fascinated by dinosaurs. One of my most
powerful early memories is of visiting the great hall of Philadelphia's
Academy of Natural Sciences: an enormous 19th-century gallery decorated, as
I recall, with wrought iron, entablatures, oak, and marble. I remember my
footsteps echoing as I walked toward the polished railing behind which stood
the Hadrosaurus, more than 20 feet tall and impossibly ancient. The mounted
skeleton -- brown, lacquered, and crackled, like a Rembrandt painting --
revealed itself gradually as my eyes adjusted to the light.
Dinosaur Hall was a temple dedicated to the wonder of creation, the
aspirations of science, and the smallness of humanity in the context of
geologic time.
I kept that faith, earning top grades in science courses, until my junior
year of high school, when the rigors of trigonometry and physics -- the
empirical fetish -- more or less put an end to my scientific ambitions, if
not to my love of science. It surprises some people when I say that the
closest cousin to science, for me, was English, because it, too, was about
the cultivation of wonder and imagination.
Nowadays, when a scholarly conference brings me to Philadelphia, New York,
Chicago, or Washington, I try to make a trip to their natural-history
museums. But I rarely find what I am looking for. I suppose I am trying to
relive my childhood. I know the past is easy to glorify, but I do not think
my disappointment comes only from my tendency toward nostalgia and
old-fogeyism.
I think natural-history museums have changed for the worse in the last 30
years. The solitude, silence, and quasi-religious awe that I remember have
been banished by throngs of screaming, barely supervised children on school
trips, who pay less attention to the exhibits than they do to the gift shops
and food courts.
No doubt, the museums were forced into that situation by economic necessity
and political demands that they cater to the broadest possible segment of
the public. That means museums simplify their exhibitions rather than expect
visitors to aspire to a higher level of appreciation for something outside
the normal range of experience.
I remember, even as a 10-year-old, not liking the new children's annexes
that were first installed back in the 70s. I felt a little insulted, as if I
was being made to watch Sesame Street, or spend time in a day-care center.
Clearly, these "Please Touch" museums have to cater to a wide age range,
but, just as it often does in the classroom, that seems to mean aiming at an
ever-lowering median of knowledge, interest, and common civility.
My 7-year-old daughter also loves natural history. She likes being able to
handle real fossils and touch exotic animals, but she does not like being
crowded and trampled on by other children who often reduce museums to
something approximating life in the Hobbesian state of nature. So we have
learned to avoid the so-called children's sections, even though the behavior
they encourage seems to have spilled out to the rest of the museum.
Unfortunately, the Academy of Natural Sciences was a victim of the
imperialism of the juvenile back in the mid-80s. Dinosaur Hall, no longer a
chapel, is now brightly lit and painted in "kid-friendly" colors. The
architectural details are concealed beneath wall-to-wall carpeting and
plaster board. Toward the back of the hall, a dated "high tech" video
installation inserts kids into a picture with dinosaurs in it, as if they
were starring in Jurassic Park, a movie that today's children are no more
likely to have seen than the old TV show, Land of the Lost. The kids make
ugly faces and dance while watching themselves on screen until the next
group comes in and shoves them out.
Never mind that Dinosaur Hall was one of the most important sites in the
institutional history of paleontology. Discovered in 1858, the academy's
Hadrosaurus was the first mounted dinosaur skeleton in the world. Dinomania
started in Philadelphia.
Now the towering Hadrosaurus is hunched over -- in deference to current
theory -- and banished to an inconspicuous corner to make room for a
gathering of fossil replicas designed as photo-ops. Instead of gazing up at
a relic of the heroic era of Victorian science, people ignore the
Hadrosaurus and get their picture taken with their head beneath the jaws of
the scary Giganotosaurus, a sort of Tyrannosaurus Rex on steroids, before
going to the gift shop to buy a "sharp toothed" plush toy. See, kids,
science can be fun!
But programmed "fun" is not necessarily pleasure, nor is entertainment the
only means of sparking an interest in science. The people who run museums
these days seem to think that children cannot enjoy quiet reflection. I
suppose they think that would be elitist. As a result, decorum -- once one
of the key lessons of the museum for children -- is replaced by the rules of
schoolyard, the serious is usurped by the cute, and thought is banished by
the chatter of last decade's high-tech gizmos.
In Stuffed Animals & Pickled Heads: The Culture and Evolution of Natural
History Museums (Oxford, 2001), Stephen T. Asma quotes one curator from the
Field Museum in Chicago: "The sad fact is that many quieter people, who put
in years of good work at the Field Museum, have recently lost their jobs to
more dynamic but less educated competitors. The nature of the work, hunched
over tiny bugs or fossils in a hidden-away cubicle, for example,
traditionally drew introverts to the curator and staff jobs. And the museum
nurtured them." Instead, the curator laments that "the current trend is for
museum trustees and administrators to ignore the internal, albeit quirky,
talent when staffing positions of power and go outside for M.B.A.'s who
frequently don't know anything about the nuances of the subject matter."
Fortunately, it is still possible in some of the larger museums and the more
obscure ones to find older exhibits -- silent corridors of glass cases
filled with specimens -- that have not been ruined by the addition of
push-button TV sets, cuddly mascots, and other contemporary affectations. In
particular, I enjoy the animal dioramas created from the 1920s through the
1940s. Those are not mere scientific displays; they are among the most
interesting and underrated art works of the 20th century. Some of them are
the three-dimensional equivalents of Audubon's Birds of America.
Successful museum installations need not always require huge expenditures
for blockbuster attractions like the Field Museum's $8-million T-rex, "Sue,"
the most expensive fossil in the world (the conspicuous cost being the real
attraction).
I remember that the second-best thing about the Academy of Natural Sciences,
back in the 70s, was something called the "Trading Post." It was a large
display counter full of rocks, fossils, and bones. Kids could bring in
specimens from their own collections and trade them for something new. I
once brought in a box of ordinary seashells from the Jersey shore and
exchanged them for two skulls: a cat and a rabbit, as I recall. The Trading
Post always gave kids the better end of the bargain, and it kept me
exploring the creeks and vacant lots in my neighborhood, discovering that
nature even existed inside the city. (Those specimens are still in my
cabinets, and my daughters are starting to add their own findings to the
collection.)
There are also a few museums that have been preserved by benign neglect,
such as the Wagner Free Institute of Science, also in Philadelphia, and the
Harvard Museum of Natural History. And, I think, foremost in the United
States, the American Museum of Natural History in New York has preserved,
expanded, and updated itself without sacrificing too much of its history and
grandeur.
In the American Museum, for example, the curators took the risk of having
their enormous Barosaurus rear up, with its head 50 feet in the air,
defending its young from an advancing Allosaurus. Set amid the marble
columns of Roosevelt Memorial Hall, the display is awe-inspiring, perhaps
the greatest mounted dinosaur in the world. The museum's Barosaurus is
probably bad science, but it is also an important work of public art that
expresses the obligations of one generation to another in a medium that a
child can appreciate as well as an adult.
Natural-history museums are not just about science. Why couldn't the academy
in Philadelphia leave Dinosaur Hall alone? Were the memories associated with
that setting not worth anything to the curators? No doubt for the hard
pressed natural-history museum, an alliance between science and business --
i.e., entertainment, tourism, and merchandising -- seems more sustainable
than the old linkage between science and the humanities -- i.e., art,
history, and even religion, and their combined power to cultivate wonder and
imagination.
On the other hand, I do admire the efforts of many natural-history
museums -- in particular, the American Museum in New York and the
Smithsonian Institutions National Museum of Natural History in Washington --
to challenge their visitors, to stand up against the pressure to expunge
evolution, and to defend the ideas that led to their founding.
If museums could keep in the foreground their complex, contentious, and
interdisciplinary histories -- while avoiding the tendency to turn
themselves into theme parks and shopping malls -- they might rediscover a
way to honor the past and embrace the complexity of science as a social
institution in a manner that respects the intelligence of visitors, old and
young, from every kind of background.
In the process, they might make some political enemies, jeopardize some
corporate donations, and sell fewer plush toys. They might also demand more
from their current audience of captive schoolchildren. And that might be a
good thing, if they aren't bankrupted in the process.
From the perspective of a long-time lover of natural history, it's a risk
worth taking.
Thomas H. Benton is the pseudonym of an associate professor of English at a
Midwestern liberal-arts college. He writes about academic culture and
welcomes reader mail directed to his attention at [log in to unmask]
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Copyright © 2006 by The Chronicle of Higher Education
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