11 October 2018

Yale and the Posture Photographs




The Power of Privilege by Joseph Soares, 2007, Excerpts

Yale willingly participated in eugenic schemes to measure personal character, in particular the infamous practice that lasted until 1968 of taking nude “posture” photographs to study the relation of body type to personal abilities. Cohort after cohort of Yale men would walk from their freshman dorms on old campus over to Payne-Whitney Gymnasium, stand in line on the fourth floor, and enter one at a time into a room without windows. Inside, two technicians would instruct youth to disrobe before they would place metal pins against his spine that would both measure and hold each youth in position while three photographs were taken. One need not imagine the experience generated more, or less, anxiety than an army induction physical, and the unpleasant registration procedure may have played some ritualistic role for the youth demarcating, like a military haircut, the transition from secondary school to Ivy League status. The practice, begun at a few elite colleges in the 1930s, was required at all of the Ivy League colleges [Brown, Colombia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Pennsylvania, Princeton, and Yale] and the Seven Sisters [Barnard, Bryn, Mawr, Mount Holyoke, Radcliffe, Smith, Vassar, and Wellesley] from the 1940s to the 1960s. 

At Harvard, the posture photographs were part of a formal medical discourse on “character.” Every new Harvard undergraduate would be photographed naked and then, on a separate occasion, subjected to a medical exam by a member of the department of hygiene. The doctor would observe and engage the freshman in a conversation about feelings, attitudes, and activities. The doctor was supposed to use a diagnostic tool that presumed to evaluate individuals against a normative standard of what constituted a healthy masculine male. Harvard’s medical exam, regardless of intent, was a technology that validated particular masculine cultural stereotypes, while stigmatizing others as deviant.

Student’s had to arrive for the doctor’s examination with a five-page questionnaire filled in, which included thinly disguised ethnic inquiries, requesting that one list one’s religious denomination, as well as one’s father’s and mother’s birthplace. Just as at Yale, answers to those questions helped Harvard track its Jews. And there were a number of questions on social class. One had to list the occupation of every family member, and report incomes.

It was Naomi Wolf, author of "The Beauty Myth," who opened the Pandora's box of posture-photo controversy. In that book and in a 1992 Op-Ed piece in The Times, Wolf (Yale '84) bitterly attacked Dick Cavett (Yale '55) for a joke he'd made at Wolf's graduation ceremonies. According to Wolf, who'd never had a posture photo taken (the practice was discontinued at Yale in 1968), Cavett took the microphone and told the following anecdote:

“When I was an undergraduate, there were no women at Yale. The women went to Vassar. At Vassar they had nude photographs taken of women in gym class to check their posture. One year the photos were stolen and turned up for sale in New Haven's red-light district." His punchline: "The photos found no buyers."





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