DNA from the Beginning
DNA Interactive
Image Archive on the
American
Eugenics Movement
Inside Cancer
myDNAi
Your Genes, Your Health
BioServers
Dynamic Gene
Genetic Origins
Greenomes Silencing Genomes
Internet Site Statistics
|
The
Image Archive on the American Eugenics Movement Internet
site was conceived in 1995, soon after the DNALC launched its first
primitive home page. We saw the Internet as the perfect medium to
introduce students, teachers and the public to this hidden period
in scientific history. After several tries, we were ultimately awarded
a two-year grant from the Ethical, Legal, and Social Issues (ELSI)
Program of the National Human Genome Research Institute in early
1998; then a continuation grant extended support to March 2004.
The Archive contains 2,500 images of photographs, lantern
slides, correspondence, journals, texts, manuscripts, charts, and
data. Text-rich images have been transcribed as text-only files,
which allow the content to be searched by our database engine. The
images represent collections from the following institutions: American
Philosophical Society Library, New York; Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Archives, New York; Ellis Island/Statue of Liberty National Monument,
New York; International Center of Photography, New York; Max Planck
Society Historical Archives, Berlin; Rockefeller University Archive
Center, New York; State University of New York at Albany; Truman
State University Archives, Missouri; University College, London;
University of Tennessee at Knoxville; and University of Virginia.
The Eugenics Archive provides materials that stimulate independent,
critical thinking about the parallels between eugenics and modern
genetics research. The site is intended as an educational tool to
allow individuals to learn about society's past involvement in genetics
by exploring primary materials that heretofore have been inaccessible
to the layperson. By basing the Archive on primary materials,
the user assumes the role of historian/researcher, finding materials
according to his/her own preferences and drawing inferences based
on their own synthesis.
Go to www.eugenicsarchive.org.
|