Archive for March, 2010

Documenting the American South, http://docsouth.unc.edu/index.html. Created and maintained by the University Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Reviewed March 30-31, 2010.

Content:

Documenting the American South is a web resource featuring a collection of “primary resources for the study of Southern history, literature, and culture.”  The primary goal of the website is to provide access to primary source material that offer a Southern perspective on the American past.  The website consists of fourteen collections that are arranged thematically.  While many of these collections pertain specifically to North Carolina history (“North Carolinians and the Great War,” “True and Candid Compositions: The Lives and Writings of Antebellum Students at the University of North Carolina,”  “North Carolina Maps“), others speak more broadly to the experiences of Southern life in general.  The thematic collections range in subject matter from spirituality (“The Church in the Southern Black Community“) to education (“The First Century of the First State University“) to the performing and literary arts (“Going to the Show,” “Library of Southern Literature“), and make an effort to include a variety of perspectives, including “slaves, laborers, women, aristocrats, soldiers, and officers” in the “First-Person Narratives of the American South” collection, and enslaved persons in the “North American Slave Narratives” collection.

Hallie Q. Brown (Hallie Quinn), 1859-1949, compiled and edited by Homespun Heroines and Other Women of Distinction. Xenia, Ohio: Aldine Pub. Co., 1926.

Perhaps the site’s biggest strength, however, comes from the “Oral Histories of the American South” collection, which contains 500 oral history interviews gathered by historians from the Southern Oral History Program.  Since 1973, the SOHP has conducted over 4,000 oral history interviews with a variety of Southern people, “from mill workers to civil rights leaders to future presidents of the United States.”  These oral histories are organized into six categories, each holding hundreds of hours of first-person narratives about their relative topic.  The Charlotte collection contains a number of interviews dealing with the integration of West Charlotte High School from a traditionally black school to an integrated one.  For researchers interested in civil rights history, the Civil Rights series provides additional primary resources on African American employment and the integration at Lincoln High School in Chapel Hill.  The interviewees in the Southern Women collection reflect on women’s employment, activist and life experiences, while the Southern Politics series includes “many interviews with prominent politicians from across the political spectrum. Bill Clinton, Jimmy Carter, and Andrew Young appear in this collection along with Lester Maddox, George Wallace, and Jesse Helms.”

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Dan Sayre Groesbeck "Shall We Be More Tender with Our Dollars Than with the Lives of Our Sons". Chicago: Illinois Litho. Co., [1917.

As this site is a collection of primary source materials, there’s not much in the way of historical interpretation happening.  Which for most historians and researchers serves its purpose well – the vast breadth and depth of the collections allow the researcher to find a ton of information from a variety of perspectives without being mediated through additional interpretive lenses of others.  When dealing the Southern history – as with any contested histories – it’s refreshing to have this diverse set of resource materials available without feeling like the collection is missing vital voices.

Form:

The website, though dense with information and material, is incredibly easy to navigate.  It encourages visitors to search for specific topics or categories, or to browse at leisure within a specific subject area.  The design of the site includes a number of links from the home page that visitors can start their search from, including Highlights, Collections, Titles, Subjects, and New Additions.   The site also includes a page of Classroom Resources that includes lesson plans in NC, US, and Afro-American histories.

Georgia Fifty-Dollar Note Dated "January 15th, 1862."

Audience:

The Documenting the American South website would be a great resource for most visitors, though the site seems most suited for scholars, researchers, and educators.  Although the breadth of the primary source material would be suitable for scholars researching specific topics or perspectives relating to Southern life, the site is very user-friendly in its construction.  In addition to providing subject guides for browsers (the people, not the computer kind) can peruse (my favorites include Explore Women’s History in North Carolina and The diary of a female plantation owner in South Carolina), the site includes guides to visitors who don’t possess advanced researching skills, such as a Guide to Using the Subject Index.

: Woman\’s American Baptist Home Mission Society, c1919.”]

Mary McLeod Bethune, Women of Achievement: Written for the Fireside Schools Under the Auspices of the Woman's American Baptist Home Mission Society. [Chicago, Ill.

New Media:

Documenting the American South has taken great strides in the use of new media, starting with the digitization of hundreds of oral histories.  The quality of the audio files range from moderate to excellent, which is fairly impressive when you consider the oral history project started in the early 1970s and may not have been conducted with the highest-end of equipment.  Many of the Highlights include audio podcasts that allow the visitor to listen along while browsing through documents, and visitors can subscribe to the RSS feeds to be alerted when new podcasts become available.

League of Women Voters of North Carolina Women May Now Vote. Goldsboro, N.C: North Carolina League of Women Voters, [1920?].

Along with the oral history audio recordings, many of the images of scanned documents are of a relatively high quality, as is the written descriptions that accompany the artifacts.  Finally, Documenting the American South includes a link to a 23-page .pdf file of comments readers have shared with the site’s creators, opening the door to an interactive conversation between collections manager and researcher.  Documenting the American South is a fantastic resource for researchers of all levels to engage with the past in the South, and they are sure to come away from the site having found something unique and unexpected.

Emmett J. Scott (Emmett Jay), 1873-1957 and Lyman Beecher Stowe, 1880-1963 Booker T. Washington, Builder of a Civilization. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Page & Company, 1916.

I haven’t been yet, but after seeing this a few months ago I am determined to check it out soon. So beautiful.

James, Jordan and I have a final project plan! Written by Jordan Grant.

Summary:

This semester, our graduate team is working alongside the Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation, the National Museum of American History, and American University’s Performing Arts Department to develop two original pieces of museum theater based upon the lives of two inventors – Margaret E. Knight and Marion O’Brien Donovan. Along the way, we’ve learned a great deal about museum theater, from the best practices in the field to the day-to-day insights that accompany researching, writing, and revision. Rather than keep this knowledge to ourselves, we hope to create a website that can help others who have an interest in museum theater, Our website [www.historyonstage.org] will focus in on the particular challenges that come with presenting history on stage (as opposed to science or other popular topics). We hope to give students, educators, and museum professionals the resources and advice they need to create productions of their own.

In more detail, the site will:

- Give a brief introduction to museum theater, describing its particular strength and weaknesses as a way to interpret the past.
- Offer visitors advice on how to begin creating their own piece of historical museum theater (not program)
- Give visitors tips, based on the our experience, for each stage of the development process (initial planning and key messages, research, drafting, revision)
- Direct visitors to other resources, such as official associations for museum theater, the best literature in the field, and examples of other successful pieces of museum theater (videos and other media).
- Introduce visitors to our team (the authors), as well as our ongoing project on women inventors.

Since our website hopes to direct visitors through paths of webpages, we plan to use WordPress to build the site. Also, since we are required to build an online portfolio for our public history project, our “About Us” page will also offer information about our ongoing theater project, complete with a bibliography, primary documents, and content-rich descriptions of our inventors.

Rough Timeline

[Purchase domain space]

Vision and Planning Meeting – 03/30/10
- Create a site map
- Finalize content and responsibilities
- Discuss site’s overall mood and appearance

Rough Design Meeting 04/07/10
- Present and Discuss Site Mock-Ups

[Construct style sheet]

Open Lab Meeting 04/14/10
- Begin adding content (text) to site
- Add header graphic to homepage

[Create presentation for class]
[Continue adding content to site]

Check-In Meeting 04/21/10
- Find missing content
-Check all citations
-Revise and edit the site’s voice
- Make additional polishes and flourishes

[Submit site for grade]

Liz Carpenter (1920-2010)

RIP Liz Carpenter, co-founder of the National Women’s Political Caucus (along with Shirley Chisholm, Gloria Steinem, Bella Abzug, Betty Friedan, among others) in 1971.


Sisters of ’77

Have you seen “Sisters of ’77” about the first National Women’s Conference? Pretty good. Watch it here!

Hard Ton Disco Queen has possibly the best video ever made: Italian drag queens, pink, clown eye makeup, heart holes, prayer, transsexuals, posers, and losers.

From Kathleen Hanna.

A slightly Dadaist collection of stuff worth sharing.

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From Ted.com, author Elizabeth Gilbert gives a Ted Talk on the idea of “genius” and the creative process of herself and others. Her speech is full of stunning imagery sure to stick with you.

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In 1970, Hanna-Barbera reminded us that drugs are bad, mmm-kay?

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Directed by Detroit’s hottest MC Invincible, The Revival is a short documentary on women in hip-hop. Hot.

THE REVIVAL from EMERGENCE Media on Vimeo.

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Can you believe this Dove Pro-Age commercial was banned in the US?

From DCist.

The Paleontology Hall (or Dinosaur Hall) in the National Museum of Natural History, ca. 1932. At the time of this picture the exhibit was called the “Hall of Extinct Monsters.”

One of the Smithsonian Institution’s most popular museums opened on March 17, 1910, becoming the second-largest Washington building at the time (the first, of course, being the U.S. Capital). Happy birthday!

Taxidermist/modeller John Widener works on the cast model of the giant whale featured in the Life in the Sea exhibit in the National Museum of Natural History, ca. 1950’s.

(Doesn’t this picture make you want to watch Bringing Up Baby?)

Happy St. Patrick’s Day, people.



Croagh Patrick
Ireland’s “Holy Mountain,” Croagh Patrick in County Mayo, where it is said Saint Patrick prayed and fasted in 441.
Photo: Peter Keegan/Getty Images, Jan 01, 1975


Dublin Street Scene, 1955
Photo: Hulton Archive/Getty Images, Jan 01, 1955