The Einstein Digital Collection in the Classroom

Albert Einstein and Henry Wallace signed petition, [1950?]

Albert Einstein and Henry Wallace signed petition, [1950?]

The Einstein Digital Collection has found its way into Vassar classrooms!

Earlier this year, we announced the launch of the digital version of our Morris and Adele Bergreen Albert Einstein Collection. While we were excited by the many features of the site, like full-text searching and translated letters, we were ecstatic that many faculty members wanted to use the digital materials in their upcoming courses. In fact, one of the biggest reasons we digitized the collection was to make the materials available to undergraduates and Einstein scholars alike! Three professors – Andrew Bush (Jewish Studies), Jill Schneiderman (Earth Science/STS), and José Perillán (Physics/STS) – have started using Einstein in their current or upcoming courses.

Professor Andrew Bush, one of the founders of the Jewish Studies Program at Vassar, will use the digital materials in JWST 350: Confronting Modernity, in Fall 2015.  The annual topic, “Einstein’s Archive,” will focus on the correspondence, photographs, and manuscripts found in the physical and digital collections on campus, as well as theoretical understandings of the process of archiving.  The transcribed and translated items will enable students to engage in close readings of these materials.

Professor Jill Schneiderman

Professor Jill Schneiderman

Professor Jill Schneiderman’s Earth Science/STS course, ESCI 111: Science and Justice in the Anthropocene, asks students to choose a scientist to place in conversation with Albert Einstein for their final papers. The goal is to compare Einstein’s commitment to justice to that of the student’s chosen scientist, examining similarities and differences. Using the digitized correspondence between Einstein and Vassar economics professor Otto Nathan (translated from German by our colleagues at Caltech), students gain a better understanding of Einstein as a scientist-activist, and can use this understanding, in turn, when analyzing the works of other prominent scientists.

Albert Einstein in a v-neck sweater, 17 Oct 1928

Albert Einstein in a v-neck sweater, 17 Oct 1928. Archives & Special Collections Library, Vassar College.

Assistant professor José Perillán has been exploring the Einstein materials in his courses as well.

His current STS course, “STS 340: Scientific Debate: Great Scientific Controversies in Context,” provides historical context to the significant discoveries – and paradigm shifts – in classical and modern physics. The digital collection, in particular, has helped illustrate the careful attention Einstein paid to his estate and the direction he wished it to take once he passed away – but his “voice” was used posthumously in ways Einstein could not control. The mythological Einstein, Perillán shows, overshadowed the historical Einstein. Future plans include a redevelopment of STS 280: Albert Einstein (the Einstein Seminar), formerly taught by retired professor James Challey in 2011-2012, allowing students to delve more deeply into Einstein’s original works in the collection. The students will have access to all materials because of the translations and transcriptions available on the site. The course will be taught in Spring 2016 and cross-listed with the History and STS departments.

We are so excited to learn more about the use of these materials in Vassar courses! Visit the digital collection at http://einstein.digitallibrary.vassar.edu to search Einstein’s letters, view photos of him and Otto Nathan, and read manuscripts, petitions, and more online.

The Albert Einstein Digital Collection at Vassar College Libraries was made possible by a generous grant from Dr. Georgette Bennett in honor of Dr. Leonard Polonsky CBE.

The Papers of Laura Benet, VC 1907

Posted on behalf of Janine St. Germaine, Consulting Archivist

Twenty five cubic feet of boxes filled with personal correspondence, diaries and assorted manuscripts documenting the creative life of poet and Vassar alumna (Class of 1907) Laura Benet are currently being processed in the Archives and Special Collections Library. Selections of the collections were affected by an undocumented fire and require cleaning and special handling.

Benet box

The first box opened revealed a trove of correspondence and
photographic prints.

Ms. Benet, born in 1884 in Brooklyn, NY, was a poet, editor, novelist and biographer. Her livelihood also included work as a social worker at the Spring Street Settlements and Children’s Aid Society in New York City.

Ms. Benet came from a noted a literary lineage — her brothers, William Rose Benet and Stephen Vincent Benet were both acclaimed poets, and upon closer inspection in this collection, one recognizes the literary talents of Benet’s mother (often referred to as “Mother Bunny” in several letters from her progeny), also a published writer with a passion for lengthy letter writing.

Correspondence in the collection includes letters from Edna St. Vincent Millay, Robert Frost and Marianne Moore, as well a large volume of correspondence between the Benet family members, including several to and from Stephen Vincent Benet and William Rose Benet. One notable piece of correspondence that surfaced early in this effort is a letter from Yale’s Registrar to the parents of William Rose Benet, dated 1905, two years prior to completing his degree. The letter alerts Benet’s parents that William Rose has been put on probation due to “serious scholarship deficiencies and irregular attendance.” Mother Bunny responds:

… Oh, I am so grieved and so ashamed! Do you not know, my child, that you are just the apple of my eye, the very core of my heart, and do you not realize that your father is giving you generously, all that which men’s sons get, and that he has had a year of great anxiety and worry that I am about used up from the same causes, and can you add a feather’s weight to the load?

More to come…

October Break at the Libraries

Library fallIt’s October break already?! A week off from regularly schedule classes is a great opportunity to focus on doing some research for term papers and other end of semester assignments, and your Research Librarians are available to help!

The library will be open regular hours over break (see the HOURS link on the library home page). The after-hours study space will be open as well. Research librarians will be on call weekdays 8:30-5:00 as well as 6-9 Sunday 10/19. We’re also available via email, phone, chat and text – see the Ask a Librarian page for how to get in touch with us.

If you’re going away for break but need to use the library’s electronic resources, you’ll need to log into the campus network via the Off-Campus Access link on the lower right side of the library’s home page. [Note: the link will only work if you’re actually off campus!]

The only exception is Refworks – if you want to use it from off-campus, you’ll need to put in the Group Code RWVassar, then your username and password.

If you’re looking for some light reading over break, consider checking out one of the library’s circulating kindles which are loaded with almost 100 best-selling and prize winning books.

Have a great October break!