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Title:
The Oxford handbook of public history / edited by James B. Gardner and Paula Hamilton.
Publisher:
Oxford University Press,
Copyright Date:
2017
Description:
xvi, 551 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm.
Subject:
Public history.
Public history.
Other Authors:
Gardner, James B., 1950- editor.
Hamilton, Paula, 1951- editor.
Notes:
Series from book jacket. Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents:
Introduction: the past and future of public history: developments and challenges / James B. Gardner and Paula Hamilton -- Internationalizing public history / Serge Noiret and Thomas Cauvin -- Complexity and collaboration: doing public history in digital environments / Sharon M. Leon -- Decentralizing culture: public history and communities Barbara Franco -- Trading zones: collaborative ventures in disability history / Jocelyn Dodd, Ceri Jones, and Richard Sandell -- Popular understandings of the past: interpreting history through graphic novels / Kees Ribbens -- The business of history: customers, professionals, and money / Brian W. Martin -- Public histories for human rights: sites of conscience and the Guantanamo Public Memory Project / Liz Sevcenko -- Archives for justice, archives of justice / Trudy Huskamp Peterson -- Sexuality and the cities: interdisciplinarity and the politics of queer public history / Keven P. Murphy, Jennifer L. Pierce, and Alex Urquhart -- Public history and the environment / Jeffrey K. Stine -- From environmental liability to community asset: public history, communities, and environmental reclamation / T. Allan Comp -- Between pastness and presentism: public history and local food activism / Cathy Stanton -- Historians and public history in the UN system / Lisa Singleton -- Good enough for government work / Arnita Jones -- Shaping institutional memory: public history on Capitol Hill / Donald A. Ritchie -- History, heritage, and the representation of ethnic diversity: cultural tourism in China / Jonathan Sweet and Fengqi Qian -- Public history, cultural institutions, and national identity: dialogues about difference / Jannelle Warren-Findley -- History museums and identity: finding "them," "me," and "us" in the gallery / Benjamin Filene -- National museums, national narratives, and identity politics / Christina Lleras -- The personalization of loss in memorial museums / Paul Williams -- The Magna Carta: 800 years of public history / Graham Smith and Anna Green -- Public history as a social form of knowledge / Hilda Kean -- Brownfield public history: arts and heritage in the aftermath of deindustrialization / Steven High -- Politics and memory: how Germans face their past / Udo Go˜©wald -- The legacy of collecting: colonial collecting in the Belgian Congo and the duty of unveiling provenance / Boris Wastiau -- Slavery tourism: representing a difficult history in Ghana / Bayo Holsey -- How you understand your story: the survival story within Cambodian American genocide communities / Socheata Poeuv -- In the service of the state: monuments and memorials in Indonesia / Paul Ashton, Kresno Brahmantyo, and Jaya Keaney.
Summary:
The Oxford Handbook of Public History introduces the major debates within public history; the methods and sources that comprise a public historian's tool kit; and exemplary examples of practice. It views public history as a dynamic process combining historical research and a wide range of work with and for the public, informed by a conceptual context. The editors acknowledge the imprecision bedeviling attempts to define public history, and use this book as an opportunity to shape the field by taking a deliberately broad view. They include professional historians who work outside the academy in a range of institutions and sites, and those who are politically committed to communicating history to the wide range of audiences. This volume provides the information and inspiration needed by a practitioner to succeed in the wide range of workplaces that characterizes public history today, for university teachers of public history to assist their students, and for working public historians to keep up to date with recent research. This handbook locates public history as a professional practice within an intellectual framework that is increasingly transnational, technological, and democratic. While the nation state remains the primary means of identification, increased mobility and the digital revolution have occasioned a much broader outlook and awareness of the world beyond national borders. It addresses squarely the tech-savvy, media-literate citizens of the world, the"digital natives" of the twenty-first century, in a way that recognizes the revolution in shared authority that has swept museum work, oral history, and much of public history practice. This volume also provides both currently practicing historians and those entering the field a map for understanding the historical landscape of the future: not just to the historiographical debates of the academy but also the boom in commemoration and history outside the academy evident in many countries since the 1990s, which now constitutes the historical culture in each country. Public historians need to understand both contexts, and to negotiate their implications for questions of historical authority and the public historian's work. The boom in popular history is characterized by a significant increase in both making and consuming history in a range of historical activities such as genealogy, family history, and popular collecting; cultural tourism, historic sites, and memorial museums; increased memorialization, both formal and informal, from roadside memorials to state funded shrines and memorial Internet sites; increased publication of historical novels, biographies, and movies and TV series set in the past. Much of this, as well as a vast array of new community cultural projects, has been facilitated by the digital technologies that have increased the accessibility of historical information, the democratization of practice, and the demand for sharing authority.-- Provided by Publisher.
Series:
[Oxford handbooks]
ISBN:
0199766029
9780199766024
OCLC:
(OCoLC)974612564
LCCN:
2017002552
Locations:
UNUX074 -- University of Northern Iowa - Rod Library (Cedar Falls)
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.