Remembrance of Things Present: The Invention of the Time Capsule

June 24, 2019
book cover
Nick Yablon
ISBN: 
9780226574271

From https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/R/bo28535957.html:

Time capsules offer unexpected insights into how people view their own time, place, and culture, as well as their duties to future generations. Remembrance of Things Present traces the birth of this device to the Gilded Age, when growing urban volatility prompted doubts about how the period would be remembered—or if it would be remembered at all. Yablon details how diverse Americans – from presidents and mayors to advocates for the rights of women, blacks, and workers – constructed prospective memories of their present. They did so by contributing not just written testimony to time capsules but also sources that historians and archivists considered illegitimate, such as photographs, phonograph records, films, and everyday artifacts.

By offering a direct line to posterity, time capsules stimulated various hopes for the future. Remembrance of Things Present delves into these treasure chests to unearth those forgotten futures.


Associate Professor Nick Yablon is a faculty member in the Department of History in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University of Iowa.

His area of expertise is 19th- and early 20th-century US cultural history, with research interests in urban history, memory and monument studies, the built environment, material culture, visual culture (especially photography), technology, business history/fiction, disaster studies, and the changing experiences of space and time in modernity.