Category: Public History (Page 6 of 6)

National Council on Public History 2010 Annual Meeting

National Council on Public History

2010 Annual Meeting – “Currents of Change” – Portland, OR

Call for Posters

The Poster Session is a format for presentations about projects that use visual evidence. It offers an alternative for presenters eager to share their work through one-on-one discussion, can be especially useful for work-in-progress, and may be a particularly appropriate format where visual or material evidence represents a central component of the project. The Call is open through December 10, 2009. Click here for more information, or visit www.ncph.org.

Awards

We also invite you to make nominations for the 2010 NCPH Awards program. Information about the following awards is listed at http://www.ncph.org/Awards/tabid/279/Default.aspx. Submissions are due December 10, 2009. Awards will be presented at the conference in Portland.

• Outstanding Public History Project – $1,000

• Excellence in Consulting Award – up to two $450 awards

• NCPH Book Award – $1,000

• G. Wesley Johnson TPH Article Award – $750

• Michael C. Robinson Prize for Historical Analysis – $500

• NCPH and HRA New Professional Awards – two $500 travel grants

• Student Project Award – $500 travel grant

• Graduate Student Travel Award – five $300 awards

Be a part of the 2010 NCPH Annual Meeting! Please let us know if you have questions.

For full details, visit http://www.ncph.org

Article on the public humanities

All,

There’s a great article today in /Inside Higher Ed/ on a symposium
called “Platforms for Public Scholars” by the always intelligent and
remarkable Scott McLemee. Sample quotation: “The public library is an
institution that nobody would be able to start now. A place where you
can read brand-new books and magazines for free? The intellectual
property lawyers would be suing before you finished the thought. So
while musing on collaborative and civic-minded research, it is worth
remembering the actually existing public infrastructure that is still
around. Strengthening that infrastructure needs to be a priority for
public scholarship.”

Special note to Creating Digital History students: digital archives are
mentioned as examples of public scholarship, and the organizer of the
symposium said talking about “We definitely want to produce a online
bibliography but maybe trying to use the Zotero exhibition approach there.”

Highly recommended. http://www.insidehighered.com/views/mclemee/mclemee263

Amanda


Amanda L. French, Ph.D.
Assistant Research Scholar, Digital Curriculum Specialist
Archives and Public History
New York University
King Juan Carlos Center
53 Washington Square South #507
New York, NY 10012

TEL: 212-998-8638
FAX: 212-995-4017
AIM: habitrailgirl
amanda.french@nyu.edu
http://amandafrench.net

Public Scholarship and American Studies Conference at

Public Scholarship and American Studies Conference at Rutgers University
Location: New Jersey, United States
Call for Papers Deadline: 2009-10-18 (in 9 days)
Date Submitted: 2009-09-24
Announcement ID: 170840
The Graduate Program in American Studies and the Rutgers American Studies Student Association at Rutgers-Newark invite proposals for panels, papers, roundtable discussions, workshops, screenings and multimedia presentations that illuminate the theme of “Public Scholarship and American Studies,” a conference to be held on our campus on Saturday, April 10, 2010 from 10am to 4pm.

Our conference will present and analyze public scholarship in light of multiple questions and perspectives. What is public scholarship? What is the place of the public in public scholarship? Who gets to speak as a scholar? What are the relationships among public scholarship and performance, artistic production and political activism? What are the local, metropolitan, national and transnational dynamics of public scholarship? How can local institutions, from museums to libraries to community organizations to houses of worship, become centers of public scholarship? How does the Web offer new venues and understandings of public scholarship?

What distinguishes public scholarship produced in the spirit of American Studies? What special challenges emerge when public scholarship engages contemporary issues or the distant past? How does public scholarship relate to the many fields that contribute to American Studies, such as history, the arts, literature, ethnic studies, women’s studies, gender studies, African American studies, performance studies, Asian Studies, Latino/a Studies, queer studies, jazz studies, folklore, social sciences, cultural studies, political science, urban studies and oral history? How do these fields influence our understanding of public scholarship and American Studies? “Public Scholarship and American Studies” will embrace topics and questions that arise from local, national and transnational experiences. How do contemporary questions shape public scholarship? How do inheritances from the past influence public scholarship today? What is the role of public scholarship in sharply polarized pu
blic debates? What is its role in issues where there seems to be a consensus?

The conference also seeks to explore critical issues that particularly influence public scholarship. What are the tensions among commemoration, documentation, and analysis in public scholarship? How do funding sources influence museum exhibits? Who owns history? Is censorship a threat to public scholarship? What happens when cultural or historical tourism becomes part of economic development strategies?

We welcome presentations from all who share our interest in public scholarship, American culture and American Studies, such as professors, graduate students, independent scholars, artists, museum curators, librarians, archivists, educators, multimedia producers, and documentarians.

All submissions are due by Sunday, October 18, 2009.

Please complete the submission template located on our website: http://www.rutgerspublicscholarship.org/submission

Whatever the format of your proposed session, we will give preference to fully organized sessions that do not require the addition of moderators, commentators or presenters.

Our AV resources are limited. We will honor technology requests in the order they are received.

FREE REGISTRATION. Coffee, snacks and lunch will be served.

The Rutgers-Newark campus is conveniently located within a 10-15 minute walk of the Newark Penn Station, and is easily accessible by bus, car, and train from throughout the New Jersey/New York metropolitan area: http://www.newark.rutgers.edu/maps/
info@rutgerspublicscholarship.org
Email: info@rutgerspublicscholarship.org
Visit the website at http://rutgerspublicscholarship.org

Peter J. Wosh
Director, Archives/Public History Program
History Department
New York University
53 Washington Square South
New York NY 10012
Phone: (212) 998-8601
Fax: (212) 995-4017
http://history.fas.nyu.edu/object/history.gradprog.archivespublichistory.html

Newer posts »