The Atomic Age Opens Collection

 Collection
Identifier: MS-0203

Collection Overview

Abstract

The Atomic Age Opens Collection, consists primarily of two scrapbooks containing mail art postcards solicited by the Popular Culture Library in the spring and summer of 1995 for an exhibition that was part of the conference "The Atomic Age Opens: American Culture Confronts the Bomb."

Dates

  • Creation: 1995-1997, undated

Extent

1,98 Cubic Feet (1 records carton, 1 archives box.)

Scope and Contents

The materials in the collection all date from 1995 through 1996, with the exception of the book of the selected papers from the conference, published in 1997.

Material related to the conference includes a promotional flier, a mailer with the tentative program and registration information, a booklet, and the book of published papers.

Material related to the mail art exhibition includes copies of the call for submission postcard, the exhibition catalog illustrating 186 images that were received, and two scrapbooks. The scrapbooks contain 158 mail art postcards and various other sized mail art and related material sent for the exhibition from April 1995 through February 1996. For purposes of storage, the oversized material found in the two scrapbooks was removed and filed separately in folders. (See the inventory for a complete listing.) It should also be noted that some of these materials are in Japanese, Spanish, and Italian.

In addition, the collection contains a typewritten copy of the exhibition script "The Atomic Age Opens: Selections from the Popular Culture Library" and a newsletter with an article about the conference and the exhibitions.

This manuscript collection does not include the final conference program, but it is cataloged as part of the Browne Popular Culture Library's holdings (POP HN 58.A75 1995). In addition, it does not include the microfilm edition of other selected papers from the conference, but two copies are available at the Jerome Library (film HN 58.A76 1997 and cac MMS1478 mf).

These materials may prove to be useful to the researcher interested in mail art or the responses of American scholars, students, and artists to the 50th anniversary of the dawn of the atomic age.

Biographical / Historical

"The Atomic Age Opens: American Culture Confronts the Atomic Bomb" conference was held at Bowling Green State University July 13-15, 1995. The conference was sponsored jointly by the Popular Culture Library and the Department of Popular Culture to mark the 50th anniversary of the first atomic bomb. The conference included presentations of scholarly papers, film screenings, a banquet, and two exhibitions organized by the Popular Culture Library.

The first exhibition, on display in the Jerome Library's first and fourth floors from June 15-August 7, 1995, was "The Atomic Age Opens: Selections from the Popular Culture Library." The show was prepared by Alicia Germer, an American Culture Studies doctoral student, and traced the popular responses to the atomic bomb from the 1940s through the 1990s using pulp magazines, comic books, paperbacks, postcards, and movie posters from the Popular Culture Library's holdings.

The second exhibition, on display from June 15-August 15, 1995 in the Popular Culture Library, was "The Atomic Age Opens Postcard Project," coordinated by Sarah Black, a member of the Printing and Graphic Arts Department of the Toledo Museum of Art. A call for submissions of mail art was issued in the late spring, which noted that any postcards received would become part of the permanent archive at the Popular Culture Library. All postcards received were exhibited, which included pieces from England, France, Italy and Japan, as well as artists from Bowling Green and elsewhere in the United States. In all, more than 150 cards were received. The postcards were scanned after the exhibition closed and were made available for viewing online at the Browne Popular Culture Library's website. At the time of this manuscript collection register's compilation, these images were still accessible online. (Online exhibit will be available soon.)

A book of selected papers presented at the conference was published in 1997 by the University Press of America, which was edited by Alison M. Scott, Head, Popular Culture Library, and Christopher Geist, Chair, Department of Popular Culture (The Writing on the Cloud: American Culture Confronts the Atomic Bomb). A microfilm edition of the same title contains a selection of papers not included in the book, which was produced by the Bowling Green Center for Popular Culture Studies the same year.

Conditions Governing Access

No known access restrictions.

Conditions Governing Use

Copyright and other restrictions may apply to the materials in this collection. Researchers using this collection assume full responsibility for conforming to the laws of libel, privacy, and copyright, and are responsible for securing permissions necessary for publication or reproduction.

Language of Materials

English

Separated Materials

Note: Five pieces of larger mail art and envelopes were removed from Scrapbook 1 during the processing of this collection and are filed in Box 1, Folders 2-5.

Note: Pieces of international mail and other material that was filed together at the end of Scrapbook 2 were removed during the processing of this collection and are filed in Box 1, Folders 6-24.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

The materials in this collection were transferred to the Browne Popular Culture Library by Alison M. Scott in 2000.

Title
Guide to The Atomic Age Opens Collection
Date
2006, 2020
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin