Christmas and Hanukkah coincided this past December, which
meant our Jewish/Quaker/secular family's chaotic all-things-at-once version of the
holidays--best latkes in the world (celery root and parsnip, YUM!), combined
with presents, the Beatles, and Christmas carols--almost sort of made sense,
for once. And then all fifteen of us, ranging in age from approximately 11 to over
94, trooped across the street to go to the movies.
We pretty much dominated the lower left-hand quadrant of
that theater. We settled in. Some of us had popcorn. And soon we were transfixed.
The movie we had chosen had just come out that day: Hidden Figures. It tells the story of
three remarkable African-American women--Dorothy Vaughan, Mary Jackson, and
Katherine Johnson--who worked as mathematicians and engineers at the National
Advisory Committee for Aeronautics Langley Aeronautical Laboratory, renamed NASA
in 1958. The film uses John Glenn's 1961 space flight--the first time an
American orbited the earth--as its dramatic highpoint; it was the unsung human computers
who made the calculations that ensured his safe return to earth.
How had we not heard of these women before? It was thrilling
to see them rise up through the ranks of the human computers--while faced daily
with the harsh realities of segregation and discrimination. We all agreed--young
folks, parents, and Grandpa alike--that this film was the best possible choice
for a family outing at the end of 2016 in the United States of America. We
really needed to see it. We needed to be reminded about the things that matter, and about the power of hopeful stubbornness to reshape the world.
I've finally tracked down a copy of the book by Margot Lee
Shetterly on which the movie is based, and I heartily recommend it. The movie
simplifies the timeline and focuses on three women's stories in order to make
the story more vivid, but the book helps you see the larger picture, the way
the war shapes Langley, and then the way NACA/NASA, Virginia, and the United
States slowly change in response to the persistent, courageous, and, I would
say, patriotic pressure put on the
old institution of segregation by women who thought their minds should get as
much respect as minds housed in white, male bodies.
(I see there's a simplified edition of Hidden Figures for "young readers," but I haven't had a
chance to look at it yet--my fingers are crossed that it's good.)
It seems to me that a worthy goal for 2017 might be to bring
as many "hidden figures" as possible into the light. Whether we are
reading books or writing them--or going to movies and then talking about them
with our friends and family--let's try to foreground more stories about people
who have played important but relatively forgotten roles in science, politics,
social movements, the arts, and in history.
Our own mothers and grandmothers, for that matter--how well
do we know their struggles, their stories?
I hope we can inspire a new generation to become avid
detectives and researchers in their own right, willing to dig beneath the
surfaces of things and to continue the work of making our understanding of
history deeper, richer, and truer.
Glad you liked this, Anne. I really want to see it. Sounds like a fun way to spend the holidays. Didn't realize the move was based on a book. I'll try to check it out.
ReplyDeleteIsn't it amazing how many "hidden figures" there are in history? I love your call to inspire "avid detectives and researchers" in a new generation--but also in those of my generation who need to be reminded that there's something new to be discovered every day.
ReplyDeleteAmen. There are so many people alive or passed on who never got their just due. It is important that we bring such injustices to light. Great post.
ReplyDeleteI love this idea, Anne, and am researching a woman who may not be a truly hidden figure, but whose story isn't represented in current picture books. Excited!
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