Invisible Labour in the Woodwardian Collection

As is widely known, the ‘Woodwardian Collection’ at the Sedgwick Museum, Cambridge, holds the nearly 10,000 rock, mineral, and fossil specimens collected by the eccentric English natural historian John Woodward between 1688 and 1728. Less widely appreciated, however, is the extent to which Woodward...

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Main Author: Joshua Hillman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Leicester 2024-12-01
Series:Museum & Society
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Online Access:https://journals.le.ac.uk/index.php/mas/article/view/4577
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author Joshua Hillman
author_facet Joshua Hillman
author_sort Joshua Hillman
collection DOAJ
description As is widely known, the ‘Woodwardian Collection’ at the Sedgwick Museum, Cambridge, holds the nearly 10,000 rock, mineral, and fossil specimens collected by the eccentric English natural historian John Woodward between 1688 and 1728. Less widely appreciated, however, is the extent to which Woodward’s collection depended on the ‘invisible labour’ of mineworkers, gem cutters, and other labourers. In this article, I use some of Woodward’s extant field notes to reconstruct his debts to these labourers. As I argue, the taxonomic schemes for metallic ores and gems that Woodward proposed in a scientific treatise of 1728 owed more to the intellectual, as well as physical, labour of the mineworkers and gem cutters that he encountered in the field than is suggested in the treatise itself. The Woodwardian Collection is thus an ideal case study for rendering the invisible labour behind mineral collections more visible.
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spelling doaj-art-4d386eacf2294ec5ad18e257127499f72025-01-07T16:09:10ZengUniversity of LeicesterMuseum & Society1479-83602024-12-01222-310.29311/mas.v22i2-3.4577Invisible Labour in the Woodwardian CollectionJoshua Hillman0University of Leeds As is widely known, the ‘Woodwardian Collection’ at the Sedgwick Museum, Cambridge, holds the nearly 10,000 rock, mineral, and fossil specimens collected by the eccentric English natural historian John Woodward between 1688 and 1728. Less widely appreciated, however, is the extent to which Woodward’s collection depended on the ‘invisible labour’ of mineworkers, gem cutters, and other labourers. In this article, I use some of Woodward’s extant field notes to reconstruct his debts to these labourers. As I argue, the taxonomic schemes for metallic ores and gems that Woodward proposed in a scientific treatise of 1728 owed more to the intellectual, as well as physical, labour of the mineworkers and gem cutters that he encountered in the field than is suggested in the treatise itself. The Woodwardian Collection is thus an ideal case study for rendering the invisible labour behind mineral collections more visible. https://journals.le.ac.uk/index.php/mas/article/view/4577Woodwardian Collectioninvisible labourmineral taxonomiesmininggem cutting
spellingShingle Joshua Hillman
Invisible Labour in the Woodwardian Collection
Museum & Society
Woodwardian Collection
invisible labour
mineral taxonomies
mining
gem cutting
title Invisible Labour in the Woodwardian Collection
title_full Invisible Labour in the Woodwardian Collection
title_fullStr Invisible Labour in the Woodwardian Collection
title_full_unstemmed Invisible Labour in the Woodwardian Collection
title_short Invisible Labour in the Woodwardian Collection
title_sort invisible labour in the woodwardian collection
topic Woodwardian Collection
invisible labour
mineral taxonomies
mining
gem cutting
url https://journals.le.ac.uk/index.php/mas/article/view/4577
work_keys_str_mv AT joshuahillman invisiblelabourinthewoodwardiancollection