At the moment, astronomers and astrophiles across the globe are just beginning to receive some of the first highly anticipated images from the James Webb Space Telescope. The short film My God, It’s Full of Stars invites viewers to celebrate its predecessor in peering deeper into the cosmos than humanity ever has before – the Hubble Space Telescope – as well as some of the human stories behind it. Created to accompany an essay by Maria Popova as part of the The Marginalian’s Universe in Verse series, the animation adapts a poem by the former US Poet Laureate Tracy K Smith, whose father worked on the Hubble as one of NASA’s first Black engineers. Pairing Smith’s words with meticulously crafted visuals from the Brazilian animation director Daniel Brunson, the piece is a wondrous ode to our desire to know the Universe. Reflecting on the project in her essay, Popova writes:
when the Hubble Space Telescope finally launched [in] 1990, hungry to capture the most intimate images of the cosmos humanity had yet seen, humanity had crept into the instrument’s exquisite precision – its main mirror had been ground into the wrong spherical shape, warping its colossal eye.
Up the coast from Mount Wilson Observatory, a teenage girl watched her father – who had worked on the Hubble as one of NASA’s first Black engineers – come home brokenhearted. He didn’t know that his observant daughter would become Poet Laureate of his country and would come to commemorate him in the tenderest tribute an artist-daughter has ever made for a scientist-father.
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Animals and humans
Why be dragons? How massive, reptilian beasts entered our collective imagination
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Rituals and celebrations
Flirtation, negotiation and vodka – or how to couple up in 1950s rural Poland
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Biology
How the world’s richest reds are derived from an innocuous Mexican insect
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Physics
The abyss at the edge of human understanding – a voyage into a black hole
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Stories and literature
Robert Frost’s poetic reflection on youth, as read in his unforgettable baritone
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Film and visual culture
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Language and linguistics
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Thinkers and theories
A rare female scholar of the Roman Empire, Hypatia lived and died as a secular voice
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Architecture
The celebrated architect who took inspiration from sitting, waiting and contemplating
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