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Michael Young, 2007-06-01

 Item — Multiple Containers

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

The Oral History Collection contains interviews conducted with 200 scientists within the fields of molecular biology, genetics, and the life sciences between 1990 and 2024. The interviewees provide first-hand accounts of their experiences in the fields of modern biology, such as neuroscience, cancer, genetics, plant genetics, genomics, biotechnology and others, from the 1940s through the 2000s. The collection contains audio and video recordings, as well as transcripts of interviews.

The interviews offer a glimpse into the life of prominent scientists. The interviews discuss scientists' early school days and beginning interests in science to what or who made them choose to go into science. They also include reminiscences about their research and major discoveries, experiences of women in science, the character and life of leading scientists like Barbara McClintock and James D. Watson, the history of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, the nature of the double-helix discovery, the ethics of the Human Genome Project and biotechnology.

Many scientists interviewed for this project have either carried out their research or attended scientific meetings at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. Their recollections document not only the history of molecular biology and genetics the but also the laboratory's role in this history. The collection comprises of Hi8 8mm tapes; mini-DV; DVCAM and VHS audio cassette tapes. Most of the interviews from this collection have been transcribed. Interviews which have been digitized can be found at the Oral History Collection page.

The collection is organized into two series: Talking Science Interviews and Presentations. Talking Science Interviews consist of individual scientists, while the Presentations series include clips of oral history interviews that were used for a specific meeting or event.

From the Collection:

From the Collection:
  1. Talking Science Interviews, 1990-2024
  2. Presentations, 2016-2019

Dates

  • Creation: 2007-06-01

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Portions of this collection have been digitized and are available online: https://library.cshl.edu/oralhistory/. Select tapes have been digitized thanks to support from CLIR Recordings at Risk Grant awarded in 2021, these tapes are available for research online via our Oral History Website and in person at CSHL Archives. Please contact CSHL Archives archives@cshl.edu with any questions regarding availability.

Biographical / Historical

Michael Young currently is a Vice President for Academic Affairs Richard and Jeanne Fisher Professor in the Laboratory of Genetics at the Rockefeller University. He earned his bachelor degree in biology in 1971 and Ph.D. in genetics in 1975 from the University of Texas. He did his post-doctoral research in biochemistry at the Stanford University School of Medicine. In 1978 he became an assistant professor at the Rockefeller University. In 1984 he was appointed associate professor and professor in 1988. Between 1987-1996 Young was an investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. In 1991 he became a head of the Rockefeller unit for the National Science Foundation’s Science and Technology Center for Biological Timing. His laboratory research focus on circadian clocks and their cellular and molecular machinery.

Michael Young is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Microbiology. Young received the Neuroscience Prize of the Peter and Patricia Gruber Foundation for his discoveries of molecular mechanisms that control circadian rhythms in 2009.

More Information:Rockefeller.edu

Extent

2 Cassettes (Camcorder footage) : MiniDV - CSHL1209, CSHL1210

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

File Plan

Interviews

Repository Details

Part of the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives Repository

Contact:
Library & Archives
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
One Bungtown Rd
Cold Spring Harbor NY 11724 USA
516-367-6872