Plugging back in to the sustainability conversation (and ungating our digital publication)

, , , ,

report coverConference-goers at the National Council on Public History’s annual meeting in Monterey, California, last March were given an advance look at a digital anthology compiled to complement the conference theme of “Sustainable Public History.”  Containing some materials from this blog, some from previous conference working groups focusing on environmental issues, and some new materials, the anthology, called “Public History in a Changing Climate,” was an effort to gather together some of the threads of what is still an emergent discussion within the field. Read More

Professional opportunities Aug. 27, 2014

To submit an item for the News Feed, send an email to: news[at]publichistorycommons.org

CFP:
11th Annual Loyola University Chicago History Graduate Student Conference welcomes proposals from public history and digital humanities – Nov. 15, 2014, Chicago, Illinois, US
DEADLINE: Sept. 8, 2014

CFP:Contradictions: Envisioning European Futures” – July 8-10, 2015, Paris, France
SUBMIT PROPOSALS Aug. Read More

Producing history and ironwork in an urban crucible (Part I)

, , , ,

Sam Smith’s blacksmith shop is part living history laboratory and part urban sustainability experiment. He is a former history major who turned passions for the past and metalworking into a business that produces objects, artisans, and history in contested space on the edge of a gentrifying Portland, Maine, neighborhood. Read More

Surfing with purpose: Online collections as exhibit resources (Part 1)

, , , , , ,

Thanks to the exponential increase in availability of digitized collections, possibilities in exhibit research have drastically expanded. Digital collections have become essential tools that help ensure the success of projects with limited budgets and tight deadlines, which most public historians might agree is just about every project. Read More

A side or B side? Postindustrial artisans walking a fine line (Part II)

, , , ,

Continued from Part 1.

So how did the small-scale artisans at Fringe fit into the proposals put forward by the master developer candidates at the March meeting? The short answer is: ambiguously. They were clearly seen by the developers as both part of the hipness of the neighborhood and part of the set of problems–what in an earlier era of urban redevelopment was more bluntly termed “blight”–that the proposals aimed to overcome. Read More

"Sustaining Historic Preservation Through Community Engagement": A conversation continued

, , , , , , ,

At the 2014 annual National Council on Public History conference in Monterey, several of us came together for a roundtable discussion on “Sustaining Historic Preservation Through Community Engagement.” The roundtable was organized and facilitated by Theodore Karamanski from Loyola University and Kristen Baldwin Deathridge from Appalachian State University. Read More