Responding to Baltimore: A role for public historians? (Part 1)

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Events in Baltimore during the last couple of weeks following the death of Freddie Gray apparently after a questionable arrest have precipitated a great deal of commentary, ranging from the thoughtful to the bloviating. Likewise, interest in a more activist, civically engaged public history has been generating considerable discussion, both descriptive and hortatory. Read More

Professional opportunities May 12, 2015

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

AWARD: ICOM International Committee for Audiovisual and New Technologies of Image and Sound – competition for audiovisual and multimedia projects by museums and cultural institutions.
DEADLINE EXTENDED: May 20, 2015

AWARD: Catherine Prelinger Award for women who have followed non-traditional scholarly paths and whose work contributes to the study or encouragement of women’s history. Read More

Schip-Shaip

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Editor’s note: This piece is part one of a special online section accompanying issue 37(2) of The Public Historian, guest edited by Lisa Junkin Lopez, which focuses on the future of historic house museums. The contributions in this section highlight the voices of artists who engage with historic house museums as sites of research, exhibition, and social practice. Read More

Building the public trust: Preservation’s middle age?

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Editor’s note: This post continues a series commemorating the anniversary of the National Historic Preservation Act by examining a past article published in The Public Historian, describing its significance and relating it to contemporary conversations in historic preservation.

When Madeline Cirrillo Archer published “Where We Stand: Preservation Issues in the 1990s,” she sought to assess the challenges facing a movement that was a quarter-century old. Read More

The NCPH meets in Baltimore next year. We shouldn’t ignore what’s happened there this week.

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While researching at the LBJ Presidential Library over the last ten days, I’ve read numerous memos on the use of federal troops and National Guard units to quell the urban rebellions of the late 1960s. It was jarring to turn on the television Monday night and learn that Maryland’s governor had declared a state of emergency and called up the National Guard in response to the protests in Baltimore. Read More

Professional opportunities April 28, 2015

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

ANNCT:Staging Our Histories: History (a)Live: Pasts off the Page & on the Stage” – May 31, 2015, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

CONF:Beyond the Professoriate: An online conference for PhDs in career transition” – May 2 and 9, 2015 (Online)
REGISTRATION DEADLINE: April 29, 2015

CONF:Archiving Women in Film & TV” – May 14, 2015, Leeds, UK

CONF:Museums, Coastlines and the Sea” – May 20-22, 2015, Norwich, UK

CONF:Visual Urbanism: Locating Place in Time” – May 29, 2015, London, UK

CONF:Unofficial Histories” – June 5-6, 2015, Amsterdam, Netherlands

EDU:Catching Stories” Oral History Institute – June 2-4, 2015, Gambier, Ohio, US
REGISTRATION DEADLINE: May 1, 2015

EDU: Bergen-Belsen International Summer School “Memory in the Digital Age” – Aug. Read More