From anti-smoking activist to archivist and back again: how museum exhibitions on the history of tobacco control are helping to educate a new generation
Background and challenges to implementation The University of Alabama Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society was founded in 1998 as a repository for the comprehensive collection amassed over 30 years by the author and fellow tobacco control activists of photographic, audio, video, newsprint, an...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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European Publishing
2018-03-01
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Series: | Tobacco Induced Diseases |
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Online Access: | http://www.journalssystem.com/tid/From-anti-smoking-activist-to-archivist-and-back-again-how-museum-exhibitions-on,83980,0,2.html |
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author | Alan Blum |
author_facet | Alan Blum |
author_sort | Alan Blum |
collection | DOAJ |
description | Background and challenges to implementation
The University of Alabama Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society was founded in 1998 as a repository for the comprehensive collection amassed over 30 years by the author and fellow tobacco control activists of photographic, audio, video, newsprint, and internet materials documenting tobacco marketing, the tobacco industry, and the anti-smoking movement over the past century. Continuously maintained since 1974, the collection has served researchers, legislators, students, journalists, public health professionals, and the public alike via a website www.csts.ua.edu and a physical trove of over 250,000 original items divided into more than 100 subject categories (eg, the targeting of minorities; tobacco sales in pharmacies; the history of smoking cessation). It is the largest tobacco-related collection at any university.
Intervention or response
Unique among tobacco control information resources, the Center has produced 12 exhibitions for museums, libraries, universities, and conferences on compelling, ironic, and controversial aspects of the tobacco pandemic and anti-smoking activism.
Results and lessons learnt
To commemorate the 50 th anniversary of the landmark 1964 US Surgeon General's landmark report on smoking and health, the Center created “The Surgeon General vs. The Marlboro Man: Who Really Won?” which comprised more than 130 original artifacts and was displayed at the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library. Other exhibitions include “When More Doctors Smoked Camels: A Century of Health Claims in Cigarette Advertising”; “Canaries in the Mine: The Flight Attendants' Battle for Smokefree Airlines”; "The American Medical Association´s History of Collaboration with the Tobacco Industry: The Unfiltered Truth"; “Cartoonists Take Up Smoking” at the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Washington, DC; and “The World's Anti-Smoking Stamps."
Conclusions and key recommendations
This illustrated presentation provides excerpts from these exhibitions, some of which are available for use by health organizations to inspire the next generation of anti-tobacco activists. Online versions are also being created. |
first_indexed | 2024-12-21T14:59:59Z |
format | Article |
id | doaj.art-3e7520602e40468f96079f64f8071366 |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 1617-9625 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-12-21T14:59:59Z |
publishDate | 2018-03-01 |
publisher | European Publishing |
record_format | Article |
series | Tobacco Induced Diseases |
spelling | doaj.art-3e7520602e40468f96079f64f80713662022-12-21T18:59:36ZengEuropean PublishingTobacco Induced Diseases1617-96252018-03-0116110.18332/tid/8398083980From anti-smoking activist to archivist and back again: how museum exhibitions on the history of tobacco control are helping to educate a new generationAlan Blum0University of Alabama, Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society, United States of AmericaBackground and challenges to implementation The University of Alabama Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society was founded in 1998 as a repository for the comprehensive collection amassed over 30 years by the author and fellow tobacco control activists of photographic, audio, video, newsprint, and internet materials documenting tobacco marketing, the tobacco industry, and the anti-smoking movement over the past century. Continuously maintained since 1974, the collection has served researchers, legislators, students, journalists, public health professionals, and the public alike via a website www.csts.ua.edu and a physical trove of over 250,000 original items divided into more than 100 subject categories (eg, the targeting of minorities; tobacco sales in pharmacies; the history of smoking cessation). It is the largest tobacco-related collection at any university. Intervention or response Unique among tobacco control information resources, the Center has produced 12 exhibitions for museums, libraries, universities, and conferences on compelling, ironic, and controversial aspects of the tobacco pandemic and anti-smoking activism. Results and lessons learnt To commemorate the 50 th anniversary of the landmark 1964 US Surgeon General's landmark report on smoking and health, the Center created “The Surgeon General vs. The Marlboro Man: Who Really Won?” which comprised more than 130 original artifacts and was displayed at the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library. Other exhibitions include “When More Doctors Smoked Camels: A Century of Health Claims in Cigarette Advertising”; “Canaries in the Mine: The Flight Attendants' Battle for Smokefree Airlines”; "The American Medical Association´s History of Collaboration with the Tobacco Industry: The Unfiltered Truth"; “Cartoonists Take Up Smoking” at the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Washington, DC; and “The World's Anti-Smoking Stamps." Conclusions and key recommendations This illustrated presentation provides excerpts from these exhibitions, some of which are available for use by health organizations to inspire the next generation of anti-tobacco activists. Online versions are also being created.http://www.journalssystem.com/tid/From-anti-smoking-activist-to-archivist-and-back-again-how-museum-exhibitions-on,83980,0,2.htmlWCTOH |
spellingShingle | Alan Blum From anti-smoking activist to archivist and back again: how museum exhibitions on the history of tobacco control are helping to educate a new generation Tobacco Induced Diseases WCTOH |
title | From anti-smoking activist to archivist and back again: how museum exhibitions on the history of tobacco control are helping to educate a new generation |
title_full | From anti-smoking activist to archivist and back again: how museum exhibitions on the history of tobacco control are helping to educate a new generation |
title_fullStr | From anti-smoking activist to archivist and back again: how museum exhibitions on the history of tobacco control are helping to educate a new generation |
title_full_unstemmed | From anti-smoking activist to archivist and back again: how museum exhibitions on the history of tobacco control are helping to educate a new generation |
title_short | From anti-smoking activist to archivist and back again: how museum exhibitions on the history of tobacco control are helping to educate a new generation |
title_sort | from anti smoking activist to archivist and back again how museum exhibitions on the history of tobacco control are helping to educate a new generation |
topic | WCTOH |
url | http://www.journalssystem.com/tid/From-anti-smoking-activist-to-archivist-and-back-again-how-museum-exhibitions-on,83980,0,2.html |
work_keys_str_mv | AT alanblum fromantismokingactivisttoarchivistandbackagainhowmuseumexhibitionsonthehistoryoftobaccocontrolarehelpingtoeducateanewgeneration |