Transcript
Page 1: Audiences and Publics:  The Census, Art and Science

Audiences and Publics: The Census, Art and Science

Margo AndersonPresidential Address

Social Science History Association November 3, 2006

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The West Wing Takes the 2000 Census

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Liverpool Creamware Pitchers

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1790 Census

Liverpool Creamware

Pitcher

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Francis Edmonds, The Bashful Cousin, c. 1841-1842, The New

Bonnet, 1858

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Francis Edmonds, Taking the Census, 1853

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“The Great Tribulation,” The Saturday Evening Post,

1860

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Michael Casey, “Taking the Census” by John Kaiser,

Edison Records, 1905

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Casey Taking the Census• CASEY: And here am I. I don’t like this job of taking the

census. Everywhere I go they think I’m a bugler [burglar] and I’m trying to swipe something. My God, I have sores on me hands and blisters on me feet from going up and down up stairs and ringing doorbells. Ah, here am I. I’ll try this place anyway

• Knock, Knock• CASEY: By Golly, look at the face on this coming to the

door. Face to face to ya to like [unintelligible]...• MRS MULCAHY: Well?• CASEY: Well?• MRS MULCAHY: Well?• CASEY: Well?

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Casey Taking the Census• MRS MULCAHY: Well? Whatya want?• CASEY: I don’t want anything. I’m taking the census, do ya mind. • MRS MULCAHY: Look here, if you take anything around here I’ll

have you arrested.• CASEY: Never mind now, don’t get excitement. I’m going to ask

you a few questions. And, if you don’t answer them right, I’m gonna have you pinched. Do you mind that? Now what’s your name?

• MRS MULCAHY: Castoria Mulcahy• CASEY: Mmmmm, Castoria Mulcahy, hey. How do you spell it? • MRS MULCAHY: What?• CASEY: Mulcahy.• MRS MULCAHY: Mu... Mu... Mu...• CASEY: M U D, Mud, can’t you spell your own name? Mind ya,

what are ya? Are ya French or German?

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Casey Taking the Census

• MRS MULCAHY: I’m neither, I’m Irish.• CASEY: Are you, by golly. Are ya married?• MRS MULCAHY: Yes.• CASEY: What for?• MRS MULCAHY: I dunno.• CASEY: I guess you don’t know anything, do ya. Look here. Have

you made any donations to the matrimonial fruit basket? • MRS MULCAHY: What...? [unintelligible]• CASEY: I mean to say have you any children? • ……………….

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Michael Casey, “Taking the Census” by John Kaiser,

Edison Records, 1905

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Robert Frost’s Census: 1920

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“The Census Taker,” Robert Frost

• I came an errand one cloud-blowing evening To a slab-built, black-paper-covered house Of one room and one window and one door, The only dwelling in a waste cut over A hundred square miles round it in the mountains: And that not dwelt in now by men or women. (It never had been dwelt in, though, by women, So what is this I make a sorrow of?) I came as census-taker to the waste To count the people in it and found none…

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“The Census Taker,” Robert Frost

• …The melancholy of having to count souls Where they grow fewer and fewer every year Is extreme where they shrink to none at all. It must be I want life to go on living.

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Census Publications

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Civil War Demographic Map

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Civil War Demographic Map

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Dedication

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…corresponding with the official returns of the 8th Census

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1870 Census Atlas: Population Density

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1870 Census Atlas

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Death by Consumption, Malarial Diseases, 1870

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Apportionment of U.S. House, 2000 Census

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Center of Population, 1790-1870

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Center of Population, 1790-2000

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Census Proclamations

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Advertising the 1940 Census

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Public Service

Advertising for the 1950

Census

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Census Director, Kenneth

Prewitt in Alaska in January

2000

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U.S. Census Bureau Pop Clock

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The West Wing Takes the 2000 Census

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Explaining the Census….

• CJ: Explain it to me.• Sam: The Constitution mandates that every ten years, we count

everybody.• CJ: Why?• Sam: Because representation at the various levels of the

government -- federal, state, and municipal -- is based on population. The only way to find out how many Congressmen California gets is to count the people in California. Got it?

• CJ: Can I just say that if the briefing book had been written that clearly, I would have easily understood.

• Sam: We're not done yet…..

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But I am for this Evening…

• Thank you….and on to our reception….

• You’ll have to read more in Social Science History . . .

• About our audiences and publics….

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“My daddy says grandma is in the census, but I am sure mummy said she is in Iowa.”

                                               

                                       

                                   

                                 

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