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The icon indicates free access to the linked research on JSTOR. Railroads and photography were intertwined technologies in the making of the American West. The railroads stitched together the coasts on May 10, 1869, when the Central Pacific, expanding from the west, and the Union Pacific, built out from the east, connected at Promontory Summit in Utah Territory. Meanwhile, photographers, often working directly for the railroad companies, helped promote settlement and tourism by portraying the western landscape as what historian Alessandra Link calls an “unpeopled Eden.” “Photographers, corporate agents, authors, newspaper editors, and publishers made railroad photographs available and unavailable for public consumption—and they made these decisions with a clear goal in mind.” Native Americans were edited and curated out—of the camera frame, at the editorial desk, on the illustrator’s pad, and on the lecture circuit. What some have called the “golden age of landscape photography” also served to promote conquest. This now iconic imagery of the American West was based on the “deliberate suppression or alteration” of scenes that included people. Native Americans were edited and curated out—of the camera frame, at the editorial desk, on the illustrator’s pad, and on the lecture circuit. When Indigenous people were portrayed, they were typically depicted as anti-modern figures giving way to technology and fading away into extinction. Take the famous photograph of the driving of the ceremonial golden spike uniting the railroad companies. Union Pacific photographer Andrew J. Russell captured the celebration of handshake and champagne. This wasn’t just a union of railroads, however. Just a few years after the trauma of the Civil War, the event was portrayed as a national moment of healing. It was a unification of the Union itself, “from sea to shining sea” as Katharine Lee Bates would later phrase it in the song “America the Beautiful.” That was, of course, a Union of white people: the Chinese laborers who laid much of the track are nowhere in evidence in Russell’s crowded scene. Also absent are the inhabitants of the region. Illustration in _Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper_ , v. 28, no. 713 (1869 May 29), p. 176. via Wikimedia Commons Yet when Russell’s photograph was adapted by an artist for _Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Weekly_ , a popular New York-based publication that translated photographs into cheaper-to-publish engravings and lithographs, there _were_ Indians in the scene. They, and the bison, are shown fleeing what the newspaper labeled a making of “amends” between competing corporations _and_ the recently warring factions of the Civil War. As Link notes, there were no amends for the peoples whose lands were being overrun. ## More to Explore ### Visualizing History Megan Kate Nelson October 9, 2014 Nineteenth-century visual images, then, had power to move people to action, to convert ideas into policy. “Euro-Americans considered the few photographs of Indians that entered print media to be contributions to the salvage of Indigenous cultures destined to vanish in the looming exhaust of the locomotive.” Link looks at photographers Russell, William Henry Jackson, and Alfred A. Hart. All either worked directly for the railroad companies or sold them many pictures. She notes that the wet-plate technology they used meant that these images were a far cry from later snapshots or the insta-ubiquity of cell phone cameras. Photographers had to transport heavy glass plates, heavy chemicals, and hooded boxes or tents for developing. Exposure times could last thirty minutes, so conscious framing and posing were the order of the day. #### Weekly Newsletter Phone This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged. Get your fix of JSTOR Daily’s best stories in your inbox each Thursday. Email Δ They actually took lots of pictures of Native people, “but many did not find their way into the photographers’ published work.” Photographs as “tangible proof of Native presence,” continues Link, didn’t go with all the talk of Indians “passing away,” with “remnants” on reservations, and with their replacement by settler colonialists. Russell, who clearly knew better, called the vast plains “unpeopled.” In the hands of distant publishers, photographs also became the manipulated “baseline” for illustrators “to plant a particular image of Native peoples in the American imagination.” Indian portraits, too, were typically studio-based, meaning that individuals were literally removed from any landscape. Link writes that in 1866, as the Union Pacific celebrated reaching the 100th meridian, a trainload of executives and celebrities were entertained by a staged attack by hired Pawnee pretending to be Sioux. Before Wild West shows and long before the movies, the West as spectacle was being enacted on the railroad tracks.

Come il #West è stato #fotografato

La #fotografia ferroviaria ha contribuito a vendere un'immagine "vuota" del West, escludendo attentamente dall'inquadratura le persone che già vi abitavano.

https://daily.jstor.org/how-the-west-was-photographed/

#photography #storia #USA #JSTOR #treni

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AI in education is a hot topic, and our 'how to' webinar on how to use JSTOR’s AI Research tool attracted a big online audience. As webinar leader Victoria said, it’s a research assistant, not a research replacement.
#JSTOR #AIinEducation #DigitalResearch #JCSOnlineResources

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A blocking feature exclusively available on #JSTOR. 🤭

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*gasp*

Thank you!

#jstor #resources #citeyoursources

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Does @jstor.bsky.social know they are that girl?

#tumblrtextposts #jstor #superman2025 #museumshift

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ACLS Marks Milestone with 100 Open Access Humanities Books Launched Globally The American Council of Learned Societies celebrates the launch of 100 open access titles available worldwide via JSTOR, enhancing global access to scholarly work.

ACLS Marks Milestone with 100 Open Access Humanities Books Launched Globally #USA #New_York #open_access #ACLS #JSTOR

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New Open Access Books through Path to Open + book covers

New Open Access Books through Path to Open + book covers

🔓 New Open Access Books through Path to Open, a collaborative Books at JSTOR initiative.

Two of our titles have joined the first 100 books from the 2023 cohort to flip to Open Access
👉 Read more: lup.be/2026/02/new-...

#OpenAccessBooks #PathToOpen #JSTOR #AcademicPublishing @jstor.bsky.social

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bsky.app/profile/did:...

#JSTOR
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#ESRAJ
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#HATYAPURI
allgraph.ro/advanced-sea...
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Rights of Nature: A Reading List - JSTOR Daily What would it mean for rivers, forests, and animals to have legal rights? A global movement is rethinking law’s relationship to nature.

Of interest for some.

> Rights of Nature: A Reading List daily.jstor.org/rights-of-na... via #JStor

#nature #environment #reading #books #bookstodon

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¿Por qué Aaron Swartz acabó aplastado por justicia digital? Aaron Swartz, 13 años después: JSTOR, el MIT y la acusación federal que lo cercó. Una historia del acceso abierto que aún divide a internet. Trece años después de su muerte, Aaron Swartz sigue provoca...

¿Por qué Aaron Swartz acabó aplastado por justicia digital? #AaronSwartz #AccesoAbierto #OpenAccess #DerechosDigitales #MIT #JSTOR #CFAA #InternetLibre #Ciberactivismo #Transparencia #SOPA #PIPA #RSS #12deenero #felizlunes donporque.com/muerte-de-aa...

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The icon indicates free access to the linked research on JSTOR. In the 1880s, dry plate photographs of the Pleiades star cluster revealed a previously undiscovered nebula. It was an important moment for astronomers, who were hopeful that this photography would usher in a new type of mechanized observation. And while it was transformative, historian Alex Soojung-Kim Pang finds that early astrophotography did not always live up to astronomers’ hopes. Astronomers like John Flamsteed (1646-1719) had long been using technology to remove human judgement from their practice. By the middle of the nineteenth century, many were intensely pursuing this type of “mechanical objectivity.” Drawing had once been an important astronomical skill, but in the era of objectivity, Pang writes, “its dependence on training, skill and judgment…were now seen as fatal liabilities that could never be overcome.” Astronomers quickly found they couldn’t escape from aesthetic judgement. The issue was getting a photograph outside the observatory—to publish and distribute pictures, astronomers relied on photoengraving. In letters between Lick Observatory astronomers and their printers, Pang finds “a world in which pictures were surprisingly plastic, images were born and died in baths of acid or under a retoucher’s tool, and the real and unreal were sometimes hard to tell apart.” “Printers found uniform backgrounds as hard to make as singers find sustaining a single note over several measures.” In halftone printing, screens in the camera created a negative with a fine grid of “pixels” that varied in exposure over the image. A printer then placed this negative onto photosensitive enamel covering a copper plate. Passing light through the negative hardened the enamel where the light came through. This allowed “pixels” to survive acid baths, leaving a plate usable for printing. The other common photoengraving process, photogravure, was more difficult and could create smoother images. ## More to Explore ### Leviathan Resurrected: Illustration and Astronomy Danny Robb March 15, 2025 In the 1840s, the Leviathan of Parsonstown, built by William Parsons, third Earl of Rosse, became the largest telescope in the world. But as engraver Carl Nemethy wrote, “the machines do not work alone.” Human intervention and judgement returned, as choices in each stage of the engraving process impacted the final plate. Engravers had to balance contrast over the image, while trying to bring out details in objects. They also had to preserve the dark background of space. Pang explains that “printers found uniform backgrounds as hard to make as singers find sustaining a single note over several measures.” #### Weekly Newsletter Get your fix of JSTOR Daily’s best stories in your inbox each Thursday. Privacy Policy Contact Us You may unsubscribe at any time by clicking on the provided link on any marketing message. Δ It was customary for engravers to touch up pictures for customers. Astronomers had more strict requirements, however. “The principal subject of the plate–the comet, nebula, or corona–was always forbidden to engravers’ tools,” Pang explains. In one case, an engraver etched circles around stars in a 1908 image of the Orion Nebula to highlight them. Lick Observatory director Wallace Campbell wrote an angry letter to the engraver to make sure it didn’t happen again. Engravers and astronomers developed what Pang calls “a practical aesthetics of image-processing.” It was a delicate balancing act between “improvement” and “alteration.” The line between these had to be negotiated, and inevitably involved aesthetic choices. But in the age of objectivity, the goal was to create faithful, trustworthy images. These choices were meant to be unobtrusive. “The irony was,” Pang writes, “that astronomers and engravers worked together on pictures so skilfully crafted that they betrayed no evidence of human intervention.”

Prime applicazioni dell'#astrofotografia

daily.jstor.org/the-hidden-aesthetics-of...

#photography #fotografia #astronomia #jstor #scienza #storia

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A reminder that when you connect to JSTOR, you are connecting to an entity that generates tens of billions a year and that killed Aaron Swartz. #jstor

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Rubiora is a Research Librarian: Let me know if you need research help ^^. We could #RP while we browse #JSTOR (I wonder how niche a thought this is). #furry #yiff #research_help #25+

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The Arab-Muslim Slave Trade on JSTOR David Gakunzi, The Arab-Muslim Slave Trade, Jewish Political Studies Review, Vol. 29, No. 3/4 (2018), pp. 40-42

Mini Thread | Mad as hell that it took me until this year to find out about the 1,300! years of this abomination. It also mentions that racism against African people did not end in Arab countries after the slave trade. #Jstor #TransatlanticSlaveTrade

www.jstor.org/stable/26500...

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Heads up research nerds; JSTOR is running a survey that includes questions about AI use in research and your perspective about the JSTOR database.

Now would be a good time to let them know what you think about AI inclusion in teaching and research

#academic #history #JSTOR #AI

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They couldn't access #JSTOR.

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The Enduring Value of Student Newspapers - JSTOR Daily More than curiosities, college papers are unique pedagogical tools that help undergraduates achieve media literacy.

> The Enduring Value of Student Newspapers daily.jstor.org/the-enduring... via #JStor

#academia #HigherEd #newspaper #journalism

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FYI #JSTOR offers a free account as an "Independant Researcher" with access to 100 documents per month.

support.jstor.org/hc/en-us/articles/115004...

#Research

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Introduction to Jewish Studies: A Reading List - JSTOR Daily The broad, ever-expanding field of Jewish Studies is united by texts, events, and figures that engage an established canon of ideas across disciplines.

Of possible interest.

> Introduction to Jewish Studies: A Reading List daily.jstor.org/introduction... via #JStor

#Judaism #reading #list #religion #JewishStudies #academia #HigherEd #ReferenceDesk

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| JSTOR JSTOR is a digital library of academic journals, books, and primary sources.

Interesting historical research sources: www.jstor.org/site/reveal-...
#history #resources #RevealDigital #JSTOR

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Symmetrical kaleidoscope pattern viewed through Brewster’s Patent Kaleidoscope, showing repeating triangular shapes in orange, white, and black arranged in a star-like design.

Symmetrical kaleidoscope pattern viewed through Brewster’s Patent Kaleidoscope, showing repeating triangular shapes in orange, white, and black arranged in a star-like design.

“Academic work can feel lonely–but it doesn’t have to be.” 🌐 Discover how Dr. Maria Rovito of @acphsofficial used #JSTOR to bridge disciplines, ignite curiosity, and empower her students. Her story reminds us that learning is a collective journey.

Dive into her story: https://bit.ly/4lXZWO6

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Left: JSTOR logo and quote—“JSTOR has a great, reliable reputation… The most compelling part of Publisher Collections is that it directly addresses the challenges libraries are facing.” —Lynn Klundt, Reference and Instruction Librarian and Electronic Resources Manager, Northern State University.
Right: grid of partner logos: The University of Arizona Press; Berghahn; Cornell University Press; Duke University Press; Fordham University Press; University of Illinois Press; Indiana University Press; Leuven University Press; Liverpool University Press; NYU Press; University of North Carolina Press (centennial mark); Pluto Press; SUNY Press; Syracuse University Press; University Press of Florida; University Press of Mississippi; University Press of Kansas; University Press of Kentucky; The University of Utah Press; University of Wisconsin Press.

Left: JSTOR logo and quote—“JSTOR has a great, reliable reputation… The most compelling part of Publisher Collections is that it directly addresses the challenges libraries are facing.” —Lynn Klundt, Reference and Instruction Librarian and Electronic Resources Manager, Northern State University. Right: grid of partner logos: The University of Arizona Press; Berghahn; Cornell University Press; Duke University Press; Fordham University Press; University of Illinois Press; Indiana University Press; Leuven University Press; Liverpool University Press; NYU Press; University of North Carolina Press (centennial mark); Pluto Press; SUNY Press; Syracuse University Press; University Press of Florida; University Press of Mississippi; University Press of Kansas; University Press of Kentucky; The University of Utah Press; University of Wisconsin Press.

Flat budgets, small teams, high demand—#PublisherCollections delivers a perpetual JSTOR license to current-year titles + earlier titles from academic publishers while you participate, with tiered pricing and integrated #JSTOR discovery.

Details: https://bit.ly/472mYQh

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30 Years of Access, 18 Years of Impact: JSTOR Access in Prison JSTOR Access in Prison is transforming access to education for incarcerated learners. Discover the story behind its 18-year journey and growing impact--from an insider's perspective.

Today, over 1M learners in 1,400+ prisons and jails worldwide have access to #JSTOR. This milestone is made possible by the JSTOR Access in Prison initiative.

Explore its 18-year history and future vision in our 30th anniversary blog: https://bit.ly/3JBh1QI

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A new model for scholarly ebooks: Publisher Collections built with, and for, librarians and publishers, to serve readers today and tomorrow A new nonprofit-led model from JSTOR offers libraries and publishers a more sustainable, equitable, and integrated ecosystem for scholarly ebooks.

#Ebooks: #JSTOR Announces Launch of Publisher Collections about.jstor.org/blog/a-new-m... #libraries #publishers #scholcomm
@jstor.bsky.social

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#Meta #AI #Theft #Swartz #JSTOR #AISucks

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Promotional image for a webinar titled 'An introduction to Research on JSTOR' scheduled for August 28 at 1:00 PM ET. Features the JSTOR logo and a photograph of colorful geometric shapes.

Promotional image for a webinar titled 'An introduction to Research on JSTOR' scheduled for August 28 at 1:00 PM ET. Features the JSTOR logo and a photograph of colorful geometric shapes.

#Educators and #librarians, join us for our webinar on 8/28 at 1PM ET, An Introduction to Research on #JSTOR! Explore primary sources from our collections including text, image, audio, and video files as well as examine secondary source content with the JSTOR Research Tool.

Register: bit.ly/45ktrVC

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Carved figurine of a cat lying down, crafted from translucent material with pink gemstone eyes.

Carved figurine of a cat lying down, crafted from translucent material with pink gemstone eyes.

In case you missed #InternationalCatDay (or even if you didn’t—because who says it can only be once a year?), it’s never too late to adore some meowsterpieces on Artstor on #JSTOR. 🐱🐾

🐈 🖼️ See more of our editor’s #OpenAccess picks on the #JSTORBlog: bit.ly/3UsR9sp

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Vintage comic strip titled "Pen Puns" featuring three panels with humorous interactions between characters in prison setting.

Vintage comic strip titled "Pen Puns" featuring three panels with humorous interactions between characters in prison setting.

📰 What can cartoons in a prison newsletter reveal about daily life in the prison in the 1950s?

It’s a great way to get students exploring primary sources. The latest @jstordaily.bsky.social teaching article shares tips, free #JSTOR collections, and ready-to-use activities: bit.ly/46RqmNL

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Access in Prison at inaugural HBCU Prison Education Summit Explore highlights from the first HBCU Prison Education Summit, where educators, advocates, and tech leaders gathered to advance higher education in prisons. Learn how HBCUs, digital tools like JSTOR,...

In the latest #JSTOR Blog post, Stacy Burnett, Senior Manager of JSTOR Access in Prison, shares highlights from the first HBCU Prison Education Summit.

🔗 Read how HBCUs, digital tools like JSTOR, and secure technology are transforming access and equity for incarcerated learners: bit.ly/4ooUWEX

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Building together: Reflections on JSTOR Seeklight and the 2025 C.F.W. Coker Award How JSTOR Seeklight brings together archival expertise, AI, and community insight—reflections on winning the Coker Award and building values-driven tools.

JSTOR Seeklight, the AI-powered technology in JSTOR Digital Stewardship Services, just won the 2025 Coker Award from the ‪ @saa-official.bsky.social!

In the latest #JSTOR blog, read how this honor highlights community-driven #archives work and #DigitalStewardship partnerships: bit.ly/46ALbNs

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