The Archives at NCBS is a public centre for the history of science in contemporary India. Over 350,000 processed objects across 50+ collections are in various forms, ranging from paper-based manuscripts to negatives to photographs, books, fine art, audio recordings, scientific equipment, letters, and field and lab notes. The holdings include the papers of the ornithologist, Ravi Sankaran, and the molecular biologist and co-founder of NCBS, Obaid Siddiqi. They include papers of TSG Sastry, a physicist who worked on the Thumba rocket programme, Leslie Coleman, an early 20th century agricultural scientist in Mysore state, and the renowned agricultural scientist, MS Swaminathan. The Archives has one underlying philosophy—of enabling diverse stories—and operates on four broad verticals: to strengthen research collections and access in the history of science in contemporary India; to push the frontiers of research in archival sciences in India; to build capacity and public awareness through education, training and programming; and to reimagine the archives as part of the commons through vibrant public engagement.
About the Collection:
Everything that is accessible through the Archives at NCBS online catalogues is available for this collaboration. Your points of entry to the Archives at NCBS catalogues are:
https://archives.ncbs.res.in/access (Introduction on how to navigate the dense online catalogues!)
https://catalogue.archives.ncbs.res.in/ (Full catalogue)
https://archives.ncbs.res.in/featured-collections (A set of collections that also have digital objects viewable through our catalogue site)
The archives’s accessions in 2023 is focused on ecology and conservation in modern India, and that would be a good area to develop stories from. However, the Archives at NCBS carries material from across all disciplines of science, as well as mathematics, health, engineering and technology. Within each collection, objects will speak to issues of politics, culture, education, caste, class, sports, labour, music (and more).