Libraries' Earth Day Events Highlight Plastic Collection Materials
Plastics.
They鈥檙e lightweight, durable, flexible, inexpensive. They鈥檙e moldable, extrudable, pressable. They鈥檙e colored and clear; they鈥檙e dinnerware, jewelry, vinyl siding, military supplies, toys and thousands more things. In the early half of the 20th century, the availability of polymers and fossil fuel-based chemicals led to a proliferation of the manufacturing of plastic 鈥渢hings鈥 whose everyday use became enmeshed in America鈥檚 social, political and environmental landscapes.
holds the largest academic library resource on the history of plastic. This includes over 70 archival collections relating to plastics, most of which were obtained after the National Plastic Center and Museum closed in 2008. Housed in the , the materials document the rise of plastics, mainly from a plastics-industry perspective, and include papers from innovators , , and . The collection also contains related prototypes, photographs, audio, film, advertisements and blueprints useful for interdisciplinary research, as well as 3,000 objects related to the rise of plastics manufacturing.

Many of these materials are now on display at Bird Library as part of the SCRC exhibit 鈥淧lasticized: The Proliferation of Plastics in the 20th Century.鈥 To highlight the exhibit, a panel discussion and reception will be held on Earth Day, Monday, April 22. (See details below.)
Courtney Hicks, SCRC lead curator and curator of plastics and historical artifacts, spoke about the exhibit and some of the fascinating facts to uncover from the collection鈥檚 historical documents and artifacts displays.