STS Circle at Harvard
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Rebecca Lemov
Harvard, History of Science

on
The Fantasy of Total Information: A Brief History of the Microcard

Monday, December 3
12:15-2:00 p.m.
Pierce Hall, 29 Oxford Street, Room 100F

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Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP to 
sts<mailto:[email protected]>@hks.harvard.edu<mailto:[email protected]> 
by 5pm Today, November 28.

Abstract: “A future five-foot shelf,” a writer for Time magazine observed in 
1944 of an emerging information-storage technology called the microcard, “may 
be no bulkier than a pack of playing cards.” From aviary communication 
experiments during the Franco Prussian war to the Belgian knowledge-proscenium, 
the Mundaneum, to FDR's wartime archives of U.S. patrimonial documentation, the 
microform (of which the microcard was an outgrowth) was a burgeoning technology 
that formed the leading edge of hopes to contain and manage an amount of 
information judged to be potentially “total.” Originating in mid-nineteenth 
century microphotographs, microform technology spread episodically. By the 
early to mid-twentieth century, archiving the “total human record” became the 
goal a range of mid-century-modern social scientists shared and, in pursuing 
it, they targeted ever-more elusive elements of the human experience. 
Meanwhile, a visionary librarian from Connecticut, Fremont Rider, invented the 
particular form of the microcard, on which was stored beginning in 1956, among 
other things, a project archiving dreams and the elements of the subjective 
life.  What sort of theory of technology can make sense of the microcard? What 
are the politics of this failed information technology?


Biography: Rebecca Lemov is an associate professor in the department of the 
History of Science at Harvard. Her research focuses on key episodes and 
experiments in the history of the human and behavioral sciences. Her current 
work, “Database of Dreams: Social Science's Forgotten Archive of How to Be 
Human, 1942-1965,” examines attempts to map the subjective parts of the human 
psyche via once-futuristic data-storage techniques. She teaches courses on 
brainwashing and the history of coercive interrogation, as well as the history 
of the social sciences more broadly. Her first book, World as Laboratory: 
Experiments with Mice, Mazes and Men (Farrar Strauss Giroux/Hill and Wang, 
2005) chronicled behavioral scientists’ attempts to engineer human society and 
people’s responses.


A complete list of STS Circle at Harvard events can be found on our website:
http://www.hks.harvard.edu/sts/events/sts_circle/
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