Abstract/Details

Marketing Agencies for Science: Nonprofits, Public Science Education, and Capitalism in Modern America

Sease, Kasey Marie.   The College of William and Mary ProQuest Dissertations Publishing,  2021. 28321252.

Abstract (summary)

Marketing Agencies for Science: Nonprofits, Public Science Education, and Capitalism in Modern America explores how the manmade environment of capitalism generated and transformed nonprofit public science education from the nineteenth century to today. Each chapter considers four untold histories of public-serving organizations—including the Smithsonian Institution and the Science Museum of Virginia—across nearly 200 years to identify common trends in, and unique transformations to, the ways that Americans teach each other about science. Ultimately, nonprofit institutions taught Americans more than lessons in physics or chemistry; they communicated the practical value of scientific knowledge to attract visitors and financial support. For-profit aspects of capitalism, including mass production and the accumulation of capital, were integral to the ways that philanthropic and public-serving organizations—typically designated as nonprofits today—first created and continued to offer science education. The public that nonprofits targeted varied over time, and immigrants, African Americans, and women of all backgrounds demanded affordable access to science instruction, effectively forging a gateway into scientific professions that are still in need of greater diversity today. Furthermore, nonprofit institutions blurred the boundary between accessible science information and profit in the United States as they developed profit-seeking forms and strategies to support public-serving ventures. As such, this project, unlike others that examine public science education, emphasizes how people reproduce and change the conditions of capitalism while embracing its underlying assumptions. Research institutions sold accessible science books to survive economic depressions; curators designed exhibitions to communicate an intimate relationship between scientific discoveries and economic progress; and for-profit corporations funded groundbreaking innovations that redefined, and increased the cost of, science education. As capitalism changed in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, so too did the lessons that nonprofits communicated to Americans about science.

Indexing (details)


Subject
American history;
Science history;
Education history
Classification
0337: American history
0585: Science history
0520: Education history
Identifier / keyword
Capitalism; Higher education; Museum education; Nonprofits; Public education; Science education
Title
Marketing Agencies for Science: Nonprofits, Public Science Education, and Capitalism in Modern America
Author
Sease, Kasey Marie  VIAFID ORCID Logo 
Number of pages
300
Publication year
2021
Degree date
2021
School code
0261
Source
DAI-A 82/12(E), Dissertation Abstracts International
Place of publication
Ann Arbor
Country of publication
United States
ISBN
9798516923494
Advisor
Petty, Adrienne
Committee member
Kitamura, Hiroshi; Corney, Frederick; Rader, Karen
University/institution
The College of William and Mary
Department
History
University location
United States -- Virginia
Degree
Ph.D.
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language
English
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
28321252
ProQuest document ID
2551247882
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/docview/2551247882/8304247E039349DBPQ/47