ncph2009.blogspot.com
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog: For when the rain stops
http://ncph2009.blogspot.com/2009/04/for-when-rain-stops.html
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog. Friday, April 3, 2009. For when the rain stops. More bookish advice on places to go, things to see, when the rain stops and you want to get out of the hotel . It's wonderful private library, but open to the public. A 10-15 minute walk from the hotel, at 251 Benefit St, Providence, RI - (401) 421-6970. 8206; - (401) 863-2146. Brown's Special Collections library. Open Sunday 1-5. April 3, 2009 at 6:56 PM. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). National Council on Public History.
ncph2009.blogspot.com
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog: Work
http://ncph2009.blogspot.com/2009/04/work.html
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog. Saturday, April 4, 2009. Does our cultural capital lead to social capital that may result in a more secure life than, say, a secretary? And, an issue that was raised again and again, what kinds of authority do public historians have among academic historians, the public and historical institutions in the knowledge economy? Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). National Council on Public History. Daily digest for this blog. To become an NCPH blogger. Art and Remembering Slavery.
ncph2009.blogspot.com
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog: Never-Ending CIvil War: Bearing the Standard
http://ncph2009.blogspot.com/2009/04/never-ending-civil-war.html
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog. Saturday, April 4, 2009. Never-Ending CIvil War: Bearing the Standard. Bruce Bustard of the National Archives noted how the 100th anniversary exhibition did not even feature the Emancipation Proclamation. Matt Warshauer of Central Connecticut State correspondingly remarked that the Civil War Cenntennial in Connecticut did not mention slavery, colored troops or the Freedmen's Bureau. Comments demonstrated that precisely those themes will be front and center in 2011, maki...Young...
ncph2009.blogspot.com
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog
http://ncph2009.blogspot.com/2009/04/priya-chhaya-and-leah-suhrstedt-from.html
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog. Saturday, April 4, 2009. Priya Chhaya and Leah Suhrstedt from the Center for Preservation Leadership at the National Trust for Historic Preservation are both at the NCPH conference, and have posted this entry. About it on the National Trust's blog, "Preservation Nation.". Posted by CATHY STANTON. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). National Council on Public History. Daily digest for this blog. To become an NCPH blogger. Capstone Session: Relationships, Generations and .
ncph2009.blogspot.com
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog: Commemoration
http://ncph2009.blogspot.com/2009/04/commemoration.html
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog. Friday, April 3, 2009. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). National Council on Public History. Daily digest for this blog. To become an NCPH blogger. Just send an email to cstanton@tiac.net and we'll give you access to the NCPH conference blog. Anyone who is attending the conference can join in! Capstone Session: Relationships, Generations and . Art and Remembering Slavery. Traces of the Trade. Young Professionals Reflect on the Value of Public. For when the rain stops.
ncph2009.blogspot.com
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog: The positive sides of presentism
http://ncph2009.blogspot.com/2009/04/positive-sides-of-presentism.html
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog. Friday, April 3, 2009. The positive sides of presentism. Those interested in pursuing the ideas and issues raised in Stewart's talk may be interested in an upcoming conference, "Bearing Witness: Ending Slavery," an international forum to be held in Newport, Rhode Island in October 2009, and organized by Connecticut's Beecher House Center and the Wilberforce Institute for the Study of Slavery and Emancipation. Posted by CATHY STANTON. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Looking ...
ncph2009.blogspot.com
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog: Networking
http://ncph2009.blogspot.com/2009/04/networking.html
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog. Friday, April 3, 2009. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). National Council on Public History. Daily digest for this blog. To become an NCPH blogger. Just send an email to cstanton@tiac.net and we'll give you access to the NCPH conference blog. Anyone who is attending the conference can join in! Capstone Session: Relationships, Generations and . Art and Remembering Slavery. Traces of the Trade. Young Professionals Reflect on the Value of Public. For when the rain stops.
ncph2009.blogspot.com
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog: The children will lead us
http://ncph2009.blogspot.com/2009/04/children-will-lead-us.html
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog. Friday, April 3, 2009. The children will lead us. I agree that children and the millennial generation may indeed prove to be surprisingly receptive activists who will transform history classrooms and public history sites with their reinterpretations of slavery, segregation, and race. Yet I am perplexed as to how to address the almost willful refusal or apathy many (but,of course, not all! And is this my responsibility as a public historian? Posted by HIS 5650: Museum Education.
ncph2009.blogspot.com
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog: Art and Remembering Slavery
http://ncph2009.blogspot.com/2009/04/art-and-remembering-slavery.html
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog. Sunday, April 5, 2009. Art and Remembering Slavery. A poster stand by the New-York Historical Society detailing "Run for Your Life Underground Railroad projects, demonstrated the kind of national networking that invites the public to learn more about fugitive slaves and the impact of the early African American public sphere. Given the NCPH's conference themes this year, the community of contacts was especially important on this topic. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Art and...
ncph2009.blogspot.com
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog: The never-ending question
http://ncph2009.blogspot.com/2009/04/never-ending-question.html
NCPH 2009 Conference Blog. Saturday, April 4, 2009. The "Whither the Field? For an organizational stab at addressing the question- and there's room to add definitions there, if you feel inspired to contribute yours.). One point that struck me in the discussion was that while nailing down a definition probably isn't going to happen, the field and the NCPH do. Have histories, and we might do a better job of communicating those, as a way of passing along our own institutional culture (and dilemmas! MTSU gat...