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Public history

Public history is a broad range of activities undertaken by people with some training in the discipline of history who are generally working outside of specialized academic settings. Public history practice is deeply rooted in the areas of historic preservation, archival science, oral history, museum curatorship, and other related fields. The field has become increasingly professionalized in the United States and Canada since the late 1970s. Some of the most common settings for the practice of public history are museums, historic homes and historic sites, parks, battlefields, archives, film and television companies, new media, and all levels of government.

Definition edit

Because it incorporates a wide range of practices and takes place in many different settings, public history proves resistant to being precisely defined. Several key elements often emerge from the discourse of those who identify themselves as public historians:

  • A focus on history for the general public, rather than academics or specialists.
  • The use of historical methods.
  • An emphasis on professional standards, training, and practice.
  • An emphasis on the usefulness of historical knowledge in some way that goes beyond purely academic or antiquarian purposes.
  • An aim to deepen and empower the public's connection with and knowledge of the past.

These elements are expressed in the 1989 mission statement of the U.S.-based National Council on Public History: "To promote the utility of history in society through professional practice."[1] They are also present in a definition drafted by the NCPH board in 2007, stating, "Public history is a movement, methodology, and approach that promotes the collaborative study and practice of history; its practitioners embrace a mission to make their special insights accessible and useful to the public." However, this draft definition prompted some challenges on the H-Public listserv from people in the field,[2] who raised questions about whether public history is solely an endeavor by professional or trained historians, or if shared historical authority should be a key element of the field. Others have pointed out that the existence of many "publics" for public history complicates the task of definition. For example, historian Peter Novick has questioned whether much of what is termed public history should actually be called private history (for example, the creation of corporate histories or archives) or popular history (for example, research or exhibits conducted outside the norms of the historical discipline).[3] Cathy Stanton has also identified a more radical element in North American public history but has asked: 'how much room is there for the progressive component in the public history movement?'[4] Hilda Kean and Paul Ashton have also discussed the differences in public history in Britain, Australia, New Zealand and the U.S., arguing against 'a rigid demarcation between "historians" and "their publics"'.[5] A 2008 survey of almost 4,000 practitioners predominantly in the U.S. showed that a substantial proportion (almost one quarter of respondents) expressed some reservations about the term and whether it applied to their own work.[6]

In general, those who embrace the term public historian accept that the boundaries of the field are flexible. The juxtapositions between public and academic history cannot be ignored, causing complications in defining who is capable of altering what we define as generally accepted history. John Tosh, a historian who has researched public history, discusses how some of the most productive discussions come from oral history, consisting of people being interviewed about their memory.[7] Its definition remains a work in progress, subject to continual re-evaluation of practitioners' relationships with different audiences, goals, and political, economic, or cultural settings. For example, historian Guy Beiner has criticized the prevalent conception of public history for not adequately taking on board “the countless intimate spheres in which history is retold surreptitiously” and concluded that “the complex relationships between private and public forms of history await to be teased out”.[8]

Related fields edit

Public history refers to a wide variety of professional and academic fields.[9] Some of these include:

In addition, a sub-field of scholarly study has developed over the past several decades which focuses on the history and theory of collective memory and history-making. This body of scholarship may also be considered to be "public history."

History edit

Public history has many antecedents. These include history museums, historical societies, public and private archives and collections, hereditary and memorial associations, preservation organizations, historical and heritage projects and offices within government agencies, and depictions of history in popular culture of all kinds (for example, historical fiction). Ludmilla Jordanova has also observed that 'the state... lies at the heart of public history', linking public history to the rise of the nation state.[10] (English theologian William Paley declared in 1794 that 'public history' was a 'register of the successes and disappointments... and the quarrels of those who engage in contentions [for] power'.)[11] In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, a distinct historical discipline formed within Western universities, and this had the effect of gradually separating scholars who practiced history professionally from amateur or public practitioners.[12] While there continued to be trained historians working in public settings, there was a general retreat from public engagement among professional historians by the middle decades of the twentieth century.[13]

During the 1970s, a number of political, economic, social, and historiographical developments worked to reverse this trend, converging to produce a new field that explicitly identified itself as “public history”. The social justice movements of the 1960s and 1970s had sparked an interest in the histories of non-dominant people and groups—for example, women, working-class people, ethnic and racial minorities—rather than the “great men” who had traditionally been the focus of many historical narratives. In Britain, this emerged through the History Workshop Movement. Many historians embraced social history as a subject, and some were eager to become involved in public projects as a way of using their scholarship in activist or public-oriented ways.[14] In the U.S., a severe shortage of academic jobs for historians led many to consider careers outside the academy.[15] At the same time, publicly funded efforts were underway in many Western countries, ranging from national celebrations like the United States Bicentennial to multiculturalist projects in Australia and Canada, paralleled by widespread public interest in genealogy, the tracing of folk and family “roots”, and other history-related activities. In the wake of deindustrialization in many industrial places, governments also supported regeneration or revitalization projects that increasingly included the use of local history and culture as an attraction or a basis for “re-branding” a depressed area.[16] Out of necessity, inclination, or both, a growing number of people with graduate training in history found employment in these kinds of non-academic settings. Public policy decisions like the passage of the U.S. National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 and the Canadian government's addition of “historical researcher” as a civil service category in the 1970s,[17] along with the rise of cultural tourism and the increasing professionalization of many museums and historical societies, have spurred the growth of the field.

In the U.S., the birth of the public history field can be traced to the University of California, Santa Barbara, where Robert Kelley, a member of the history faculty, obtained a Rockefeller Foundation grant in 1976 to create a graduate program to train young historians for public and private sector careers.[18] Kelley drew on his own extensive experience as a consultant and legal witness in water litigation cases in conceiving the idea of “public history” as a field in its own right. Conferences in Scottsdale, Arizona in 1978 and Montecito, California in 1979 helped to catalyze the new field. The launch of a professional journal, The Public Historian, in 1978, and the founding of the National Council on Public History in 1979 further served to give public-minded historians in the academy and isolated practitioners outside of it a sense that they shared a set of missions, experiences, and methods.

Public history in Canada has followed a similar trajectory in many ways, including the experience of an academic “jobs crisis” in the 1970s and the importance of government as a source of employment for public historians.[19] In 1983, the University of Waterloo created a Masters program in Public History (now defunct), followed by The University of Western Ontario in 1986, and Carleton University in 2002. Also as in the U.S., Canadian public funding for history and heritage projects has shrunk in the past two decades, with public historians increasingly accountable to funders for the effectiveness of their work.[20]

Public history also exists as an identifiable field in Australia[21] and to a lesser extent in Europe[22][23] and other places. In Latin America, public history finds its highest expression in Brazil, where public history is closely connected with social history and oral history. The Brazilian Public History Network, created in 2012, has been responsible for promoting publications and sponsoring events of national and international scope aimed to foster a creative and cosmopolitan dialogue.[24] As in the U.S. and Canada, there are many public projects involving historians and the interpretation of history that do not necessarily claim the specific label “public history.”

The International Federation for Public History (IFPH-FIHP)[25] was formed in 2010 and became an international association with elected Steering Committee in January 2012.[26] IFPH is also a permanent[27] Internal Commission of the International Committee of Historical Sciences (ICHS-CISH). The IFPH seeks to broaden international exchanges about the practice and teaching of public history and it is one of the constitutive co-operation partners of the journal Public History Weekly. From 2018 IFPH has published its own journal International Public History edited by Andreas Etges (LMU, Munich) and David Dean (Carleton University, Ottawa).

Public history continues to develop and define itself. There are currently many graduate and undergraduate public history programs in the U.S., Canada, and other countries (see list and links below). The field has a natural synergy with digital history, with its emphasis on access and broad participation in the creation of historical knowledge. In recent years there has been a growing body of public historical scholarship, including works recognized by the annual National Council on Public History Book Award.[28] In several countries, studies have been conducted to explore how people understand and engage with the past, deepening public historians’ sense of how their own work can best connect with their audiences.[29] While high-profile “history wars” have taken place over public exhibits and interpretations of history in many places in recent years (for example, Australia's ongoing debate over the history of colonisation and indigenous peoples, the furor over Jack Granatstein's 1998 book Who Killed Canadian History?, or the 1994 controversy over the National Air and Space Museum's planned exhibit on the Enola Gay bomber), public historians tend to welcome these as opportunities to participate in vigorous public discussions over the meanings of the past, debating how people arrive at those meanings.

An evolving form of locally collected and publicly presented history, seen in projects like If This House Could Talk and the Humanities Truck are a less critical and validated public presentation of history, yet offer engagement at the grass roots level that may encourage new forms of collecting history about the everyday.[30]

Internet edit

People with some training in the discipline of history have increasingly engaged on public history matters in recent years on the Internet away from specialized academic settings. Blogs, podcasts, vlogs, participatory encyclopedias and social medias have often been used to reach and better engage the public prior to publications in more traditional print medias such as books and bulletins. Public interest in own family history (or genealogy) has much contributed to reviving interest in local, regional and broader continental history. Ancestry sharing on social medias has been most noteworthy. The large scale study of history-related tweets conducted in 2021 has analyzed different characteristics of history-related messages which are shared online including mentioned entities, time scope, retweeting practices or types of included media.[31]

Examples edit

The National Council on Public History's Robert Kelley Memorial Award, “honors distinguished and outstanding achievements by individuals, institutions, non-profit or corporate entities for having made significant inroads in making history relevant to individual lives of ordinary people outside of academia.”[32] Its recipients reflect a broad mix of scholarly, governmental, and popular projects:

  • 2020 - Martin Blatt, Northeastern University
  • 2017 - Lonnie G. Bunch, III, National Museum of African American History & Culture
  • 2016 - Donald A. Ritchie, Senate Historical Office
  • 2015 - Janelle Warren-Findley, Arizona State University
  • 2014 - Michael Devine, Director, Harry S. Truman Library and Museum
  • 2012 - Lindsey Reed, Managing Editor of The Public Historian
  • 2010 – Richard Allan Baker, United States Senate Historical Office
  • 2008 – Alan S. Newell, Historical Research Associates, Inc.
  • 2006 – Dwight T. Pitcaithley, National Park Service
  • 2004 – The Government and Citizens of the Tr’ondek Hwech’in, First Native Peoples of the Klondike
  • 2002 – The University of South Carolina Public History Program
  • 2001 – Debra Bernhardt, Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives at New York University
  • 1999 – Otis L.Graham Jr., University of North Carolina, Wilmington
  • 1998 – The American Social History Project
  • 1997 – Page Putnam Miller, Coordinating Committee for the Promotion of History (now the National Coalition for History)

University graduate programs edit

An extensive listing of graduate programs in public history in the U.S., Canada, and elsewhere, are on the National Council on Public History website.National Council on Public History, [33]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Reflections on an Idea: NCPH’s First Decade by Barbara J. Howe, Chair's Annual Address, The Public Historian, Vol. 11, No. 3 (Summer 1989), pp. 69–85
  2. ^ ""Public History Redux"[permanent dead link], Public History News (September 2007)
  3. ^ Peter Novick, That Noble Dream: The "Objectivity Question" and the American Historical Profession (1988), 510-21
  4. ^ Cathy Stanton, The Lowell Experiment: Public History in a Postindustrial City (U. of Massachusetts Press, 2006), p. 28
  5. ^ Paul Ashton and Hilda Kean (eds), People and their Pasts: Public History Today (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009), p. 1
  6. ^ John Dichtl and Robert B. Townsend, "A Picture of Public History: Preliminary Results from the 2008 Survey of Public History Professionals" in Public History News, Vol. 29, No. 4 (September 2009)
  7. ^ Tosh, John (2013-08-21). The Pursuit of History. doi:10.4324/9781315835341. ISBN 9781315835341.
  8. ^ Guy Beiner, Forgetful Remembrance: Social Forgetting and Vernacular Historiography of a Rebellion in Ulster (Oxford University Press, 2018), pp. 11-12.
  9. ^ Marko Demantowsky, “Public History” – Sublation of a German Debate?, Public History Weekly, volume 3, number 2, 2015
  10. ^ Ludmilla Jordanova, The Practice of History (London: Edward Arnold, 2003) p. 155.
  11. ^ Editorial, Public History Review, vol 10, 2003, p. 5.
  12. ^ Ian Tyrrell, Historians in Public: the Practice of American History, 1890-1970 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005), p. 209.
  13. ^ Rebecca Conard, Benjamin Shambaugh and the Intellectual Foundations of Public History (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 2002), p. 148
  14. ^ James Green, Taking History to Heart: The Power of the Past in Building Social Movements (Amherst, Massachusetts: University of Massachusetts Press, 2000), p. 2
  15. ^ Novick, That Noble Dream, p. 512
  16. ^ Bella Dicks, Culture on Display: The Production of Contemporary Visitability (Maidenhead, UK: Open University Press, 2003), p. 35
  17. ^ John R. English, "The Tradition of Public History in Canada," The Public Historian Vol. 5, No. 1 (Winter 1983), pp. 58-59
  18. ^ G. Wesley Johnson, "The Origins of The Public Historian and the National Council on Public History," The Public Historian Vol. 21, No. 3 (Summer 1999), pp. 167-79
  19. ^ English, "Tradition of Public History in Canada"
  20. ^ Lyle Dick, "Public History in Canada: An Introduction," The Public Historian Vol. 31, No. 1 (February 2009), pp. 9-10
  21. ^ Ann Curthoys and Paula Hamilton, “What Makes History Public?” Public History Review 1992, pp. 8-13
  22. ^ Jill Liddington, "What is Public History? Publics and Their Pasts, Meanings and Practices," Oral History (Spring 2002)
  23. ^ Anthony R. Sutcliffe, "Gleams and Echoes of Public History in Western Europe: Before and After the Rotterdam Conference," The Public Historian Vol. 6, No. 4 (Fall 1984), pp. 7-16
  24. ^ "Brazilian Public History Network".
  25. ^ "IFPH-FIHP – The International Federation for Public History blog promotes international debates between Public Historians and informs about the activities of the IFPH-FIHP".
  26. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-05-17. Retrieved 2014-05-16.
  27. ^ Internal Commission for the International Committee of Historical Sciences 2015-09-23 at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ "Book Award | National Council on Public History". Retrieved 2022-03-31.
  29. ^ For an overview of these, see Margaret Conrad, Jocelyn Létourneau, and David Northrup, "Canadians and Their Pasts: An Exploration in Historical Consciousness," The Public Historian Vol. 31, No. 1 (February 2009)
  30. ^ "Connecting Neighbors through their buildings".
  31. ^ Sumikawa, Yasunobu; Jatowt, Adam (2020). "Analyzing history-related posts in twitter". International Journal on Digital Libraries. Springer. 22: 105–134. doi:10.1007/s00799-020-00296-2.
  32. ^ "Robert Kelley Memorial Award". National Council on Public History.
  33. ^ "Guide to Public history programs". ncph.org/. Retrieved 2023-09-08.
  34. ^ (since 2017) (description, videos in Greek). www.eap.gr. Retrieved 2019-02-12.
  35. ^ Manolis Peponas, "". ifph.hypotheses.org. Retrieved 2019-02-12.

Bibliography edit

  • Andrew Hurley. Beyond Preservation: Using Public History to Revitalize Inner Cities (Temple University Press; 2010) 248 pages; focus on successful projects in St. Louis and other cities.
  • What is Public History? from the NCPH
  • Reflections on an Idea: NCPH’s First Decade by Barbara J. Howe, Chair's Annual Address, The Public Historian, Vol. 11, No. 3 (Summer 1989), pp. 69–85
  • Public History in Canada. Special Issue, The Public Historian, Vol. 30, No. 1 (Winter 2009).
  • Juniele R. Almeida & Marta G. O. Rovai (ed.) Introdução à História Pública (Letra e Voz; 2011); first Brazilian public history handbook.
  • La “Public History”: una disciplina fantasma? in Serge Noiret (ed.): "Public History. Pratiche nazionali e identità globale", Memoria e Ricerca, n.37, May–August 2011, pp. 10–35. (together with " Premessa: per una Federazione Internazionale di Public History", pp. 5–7.)
  • Serge Noiret. Internationalizing Public History in Public History Weekly Vol. 2, No. 34 (sept. 2014)
  • Irmgard Zündorf. Contemporary History and Public History in Docupedia Zeitgeschichte, March 16, 2017.
  • Marko Demantowsky. "What is Public History", in Public history and school. International perspectives, 4–37, De Gruyter publishers: Boston/Berlin, 2018.

public, history, broad, range, activities, undertaken, people, with, some, training, discipline, history, generally, working, outside, specialized, academic, settings, practice, deeply, rooted, areas, historic, preservation, archival, science, oral, history, m. Public history is a broad range of activities undertaken by people with some training in the discipline of history who are generally working outside of specialized academic settings Public history practice is deeply rooted in the areas of historic preservation archival science oral history museum curatorship and other related fields The field has become increasingly professionalized in the United States and Canada since the late 1970s Some of the most common settings for the practice of public history are museums historic homes and historic sites parks battlefields archives film and television companies new media and all levels of government Contents 1 Definition 2 Related fields 3 History 4 Internet 5 Examples 6 University graduate programs 7 Footnotes 8 BibliographyDefinition editBecause it incorporates a wide range of practices and takes place in many different settings public history proves resistant to being precisely defined Several key elements often emerge from the discourse of those who identify themselves as public historians A focus on history for the general public rather than academics or specialists The use of historical methods An emphasis on professional standards training and practice An emphasis on the usefulness of historical knowledge in some way that goes beyond purely academic or antiquarian purposes An aim to deepen and empower the public s connection with and knowledge of the past These elements are expressed in the 1989 mission statement of the U S based National Council on Public History To promote the utility of history in society through professional practice 1 They are also present in a definition drafted by the NCPH board in 2007 stating Public history is a movement methodology and approach that promotes the collaborative study and practice of history its practitioners embrace a mission to make their special insights accessible and useful to the public However this draft definition prompted some challenges on the H Public listserv from people in the field 2 who raised questions about whether public history is solely an endeavor by professional or trained historians or if shared historical authority should be a key element of the field Others have pointed out that the existence of many publics for public history complicates the task of definition For example historian Peter Novick has questioned whether much of what is termed public history should actually be called private history for example the creation of corporate histories or archives or popular history for example research or exhibits conducted outside the norms of the historical discipline 3 Cathy Stanton has also identified a more radical element in North American public history but has asked how much room is there for the progressive component in the public history movement 4 Hilda Kean and Paul Ashton have also discussed the differences in public history in Britain Australia New Zealand and the U S arguing against a rigid demarcation between historians and their publics 5 A 2008 survey of almost 4 000 practitioners predominantly in the U S showed that a substantial proportion almost one quarter of respondents expressed some reservations about the term and whether it applied to their own work 6 In general those who embrace the term public historian accept that the boundaries of the field are flexible The juxtapositions between public and academic history cannot be ignored causing complications in defining who is capable of altering what we define as generally accepted history John Tosh a historian who has researched public history discusses how some of the most productive discussions come from oral history consisting of people being interviewed about their memory 7 Its definition remains a work in progress subject to continual re evaluation of practitioners relationships with different audiences goals and political economic or cultural settings For example historian Guy Beiner has criticized the prevalent conception of public history for not adequately taking on board the countless intimate spheres in which history is retold surreptitiously and concluded that the complex relationships between private and public forms of history await to be teased out 8 Related fields editPublic history refers to a wide variety of professional and academic fields 9 Some of these include Applied history Archival science Cultural heritage management Digital history Heritage interpretation Historic preservation Historical archaeology Museology Oral history Public humanities Popular historyIn addition a sub field of scholarly study has developed over the past several decades which focuses on the history and theory of collective memory and history making This body of scholarship may also be considered to be public history History editPublic history has many antecedents These include history museums historical societies public and private archives and collections hereditary and memorial associations preservation organizations historical and heritage projects and offices within government agencies and depictions of history in popular culture of all kinds for example historical fiction Ludmilla Jordanova has also observed that the state lies at the heart of public history linking public history to the rise of the nation state 10 English theologian William Paley declared in 1794 that public history was a register of the successes and disappointments and the quarrels of those who engage in contentions for power 11 In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries a distinct historical discipline formed within Western universities and this had the effect of gradually separating scholars who practiced history professionally from amateur or public practitioners 12 While there continued to be trained historians working in public settings there was a general retreat from public engagement among professional historians by the middle decades of the twentieth century 13 During the 1970s a number of political economic social and historiographical developments worked to reverse this trend converging to produce a new field that explicitly identified itself as public history The social justice movements of the 1960s and 1970s had sparked an interest in the histories of non dominant people and groups for example women working class people ethnic and racial minorities rather than the great men who had traditionally been the focus of many historical narratives In Britain this emerged through the History Workshop Movement Many historians embraced social history as a subject and some were eager to become involved in public projects as a way of using their scholarship in activist or public oriented ways 14 In the U S a severe shortage of academic jobs for historians led many to consider careers outside the academy 15 At the same time publicly funded efforts were underway in many Western countries ranging from national celebrations like the United States Bicentennial to multiculturalist projects in Australia and Canada paralleled by widespread public interest in genealogy the tracing of folk and family roots and other history related activities In the wake of deindustrialization in many industrial places governments also supported regeneration or revitalization projects that increasingly included the use of local history and culture as an attraction or a basis for re branding a depressed area 16 Out of necessity inclination or both a growing number of people with graduate training in history found employment in these kinds of non academic settings Public policy decisions like the passage of the U S National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 and the Canadian government s addition of historical researcher as a civil service category in the 1970s 17 along with the rise of cultural tourism and the increasing professionalization of many museums and historical societies have spurred the growth of the field In the U S the birth of the public history field can be traced to the University of California Santa Barbara where Robert Kelley a member of the history faculty obtained a Rockefeller Foundation grant in 1976 to create a graduate program to train young historians for public and private sector careers 18 Kelley drew on his own extensive experience as a consultant and legal witness in water litigation cases in conceiving the idea of public history as a field in its own right Conferences in Scottsdale Arizona in 1978 and Montecito California in 1979 helped to catalyze the new field The launch of a professional journal The Public Historian in 1978 and the founding of the National Council on Public History in 1979 further served to give public minded historians in the academy and isolated practitioners outside of it a sense that they shared a set of missions experiences and methods Public history in Canada has followed a similar trajectory in many ways including the experience of an academic jobs crisis in the 1970s and the importance of government as a source of employment for public historians 19 In 1983 the University of Waterloo created a Masters program in Public History now defunct followed by The University of Western Ontario in 1986 and Carleton University in 2002 Also as in the U S Canadian public funding for history and heritage projects has shrunk in the past two decades with public historians increasingly accountable to funders for the effectiveness of their work 20 Public history also exists as an identifiable field in Australia 21 and to a lesser extent in Europe 22 23 and other places In Latin America public history finds its highest expression in Brazil where public history is closely connected with social history and oral history The Brazilian Public History Network created in 2012 has been responsible for promoting publications and sponsoring events of national and international scope aimed to foster a creative and cosmopolitan dialogue 24 As in the U S and Canada there are many public projects involving historians and the interpretation of history that do not necessarily claim the specific label public history The International Federation for Public History IFPH FIHP 25 was formed in 2010 and became an international association with elected Steering Committee in January 2012 26 IFPH is also a permanent 27 Internal Commission of the International Committee of Historical Sciences ICHS CISH The IFPH seeks to broaden international exchanges about the practice and teaching of public history and it is one of the constitutive co operation partners of the journal Public History Weekly From 2018 IFPH has published its own journal International Public History edited by Andreas Etges LMU Munich and David Dean Carleton University Ottawa Public history continues to develop and define itself There are currently many graduate and undergraduate public history programs in the U S Canada and other countries see list and links below The field has a natural synergy with digital history with its emphasis on access and broad participation in the creation of historical knowledge In recent years there has been a growing body of public historical scholarship including works recognized by the annual National Council on Public History Book Award 28 In several countries studies have been conducted to explore how people understand and engage with the past deepening public historians sense of how their own work can best connect with their audiences 29 While high profile history wars have taken place over public exhibits and interpretations of history in many places in recent years for example Australia s ongoing debate over the history of colonisation and indigenous peoples the furor over Jack Granatstein s 1998 book Who Killed Canadian History or the 1994 controversy over the National Air and Space Museum s planned exhibit on the Enola Gay bomber public historians tend to welcome these as opportunities to participate in vigorous public discussions over the meanings of the past debating how people arrive at those meanings An evolving form of locally collected and publicly presented history seen in projects like If This House Could Talk and the Humanities Truck are a less critical and validated public presentation of history yet offer engagement at the grass roots level that may encourage new forms of collecting history about the everyday 30 Internet editPeople with some training in the discipline of history have increasingly engaged on public history matters in recent years on the Internet away from specialized academic settings Blogs podcasts vlogs participatory encyclopedias and social medias have often been used to reach and better engage the public prior to publications in more traditional print medias such as books and bulletins Public interest in own family history or genealogy has much contributed to reviving interest in local regional and broader continental history Ancestry sharing on social medias has been most noteworthy The large scale study of history related tweets conducted in 2021 has analyzed different characteristics of history related messages which are shared online including mentioned entities time scope retweeting practices or types of included media 31 Examples editThe National Council on Public History s Robert Kelley Memorial Award honors distinguished and outstanding achievements by individuals institutions non profit or corporate entities for having made significant inroads in making history relevant to individual lives of ordinary people outside of academia 32 Its recipients reflect a broad mix of scholarly governmental and popular projects 2020 Martin Blatt Northeastern University 2017 Lonnie G Bunch III National Museum of African American History amp Culture 2016 Donald A Ritchie Senate Historical Office 2015 Janelle Warren Findley Arizona State University 2014 Michael Devine Director Harry S Truman Library and Museum 2012 Lindsey Reed Managing Editor of The Public Historian 2010 Richard Allan Baker United States Senate Historical Office 2008 Alan S Newell Historical Research Associates Inc 2006 Dwight T Pitcaithley National Park Service 2004 The Government and Citizens of the Tr ondek Hwech in First Native Peoples of the Klondike 2002 The University of South Carolina Public History Program 2001 Debra Bernhardt Robert F Wagner Labor Archives at New York University 1999 Otis L Graham Jr University of North Carolina Wilmington 1998 The American Social History Project 1997 Page Putnam Miller Coordinating Committee for the Promotion of History now the National Coalition for History University graduate programs editAn extensive listing of graduate programs in public history in the U S Canada and elsewhere are on the National Council on Public History website National Council on Public History 33 MA in Public History Auburn University Auburn Alabama United States MA in History with concentration in Public History American University Washington D C United States MA amp Ph D in Public History Arizona State University Tempe Arizona United States MA in Public History Carleton University Ottawa Ontario Canada MA in Public History Central Connecticut State University New Britain Connecticut United States MA in History and or Advanced Certificate in Public History College of Staten Island Staten Island NY United States MA in Public History Florida State University Tallahassee FL United States MA in Public History Freie Universitat Berlin Germany MA in Public History Georgia Southern University Statesboro GA United States MA in Public History Hellenic Open University Patras Greece 34 35 MA in Public History Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis Indiana United States MA in Public History and joint PhD in American History Public History Loyola University Chicago Chicago Illinois United States MA amp Ph D In Public History Middle Tennessee State University MA amp PhD in Public History North Carolina State University Raleigh NC United States MA in history with Concentration in Public History North Dakota State University Fargo North Dakota United States MA in Public History Northern Kentucky University Highland Heights Kentucky United States MA in History with Concentration in Public History Northeastern University Boston MA United States MA Public History Ruskin College Oxford United Kingdom MA in Public History Southeast Missouri State University Cape Girardeau MO United States MA in Public History Stephen F Austin State University Nacogdcohes Texas MA in Public History Temple University Philadelphia Pennsylvania United States MA in Public History Texas State University San Marcos Texas United States Ph D in Public History and Cultural Heritage Trinity College Dublin MA in Public History University of Amsterdam Amsterdam the Netherlands MA amp PhD in Public History University of California Riverside MA amp PhD in Public History University of California Santa Barbara also has joint PhD program in Public History with California State University Sacramento MA Public History University College London United Kingdom MA in Public History University of Houston Houston Texas United States MA in Public History Oral History and Community Heritage University of Huddersfield United Kingdom MA in history with a certificate in Public History University of Louisville Louisville Kentucky United States MA in Historical Studies Public History Track University of Maryland Baltimore County Baltimore MD United States MA in Public History University of Massachusetts Amherst Amherst MA United States MA in history with a concentration in Public History University of Missouri Kansas City Kansas City Missouri United States MA in Public History University of South Carolina Columbia SC MA in Public History University of Western Ontario London Ontario Canada MA in Public History and the Institute for the Public Understanding of the Past University of York York United Kingdom MA in Public History West Virginia University Morgantown WV United States MA in Public History Wright State University Dayton OhioFootnotes edit Reflections on an Idea NCPH s First Decade by Barbara J Howe Chair s Annual Address The Public Historian Vol 11 No 3 Summer 1989 pp 69 85 Public History Redux permanent dead link Public History News September 2007 Peter Novick That Noble Dream The Objectivity Question and the American Historical Profession 1988 510 21 Cathy Stanton The Lowell Experiment Public History in a Postindustrial City U of Massachusetts Press 2006 p 28 Paul Ashton and Hilda Kean eds People and their Pasts Public History Today Palgrave Macmillan 2009 p 1 John Dichtl and Robert B Townsend A Picture of Public History Preliminary Results from the 2008 Survey of Public History Professionals in Public History News Vol 29 No 4 September 2009 Tosh John 2013 08 21 The Pursuit of History doi 10 4324 9781315835341 ISBN 9781315835341 Guy Beiner Forgetful Remembrance Social Forgetting and Vernacular Historiography of a Rebellion in Ulster Oxford University Press 2018 pp 11 12 Marko Demantowsky Public History Sublation of a German Debate Public History Weekly volume 3 number 2 2015 Ludmilla Jordanova The Practice of History London Edward Arnold 2003 p 155 Editorial Public History Review vol 10 2003 p 5 Ian Tyrrell Historians in Public the Practice of American History 1890 1970 Chicago University of Chicago Press 2005 p 209 Rebecca Conard Benjamin Shambaugh and the Intellectual Foundations of Public History Iowa City University of Iowa Press 2002 p 148 James Green Taking History to Heart The Power of the Past in Building Social Movements Amherst Massachusetts University of Massachusetts Press 2000 p 2 Novick That Noble Dream p 512 Bella Dicks Culture on Display The Production of Contemporary Visitability Maidenhead UK Open University Press 2003 p 35 John R English The Tradition of Public History in Canada The Public Historian Vol 5 No 1 Winter 1983 pp 58 59 G Wesley Johnson The Origins of The Public Historian and the National Council on Public History The Public Historian Vol 21 No 3 Summer 1999 pp 167 79 English Tradition of Public History in Canada Lyle Dick Public History in Canada An Introduction The Public Historian Vol 31 No 1 February 2009 pp 9 10 Ann Curthoys and Paula Hamilton What Makes History Public Public History Review 1992 pp 8 13 Jill Liddington What is Public History Publics and Their Pasts Meanings and Practices Oral History Spring 2002 Anthony R Sutcliffe Gleams and Echoes of Public History in Western Europe Before and After the Rotterdam Conference The Public Historian Vol 6 No 4 Fall 1984 pp 7 16 Brazilian Public History Network IFPH FIHP The International Federation for Public History blog promotes international debates between Public Historians and informs about the activities of the IFPH FIHP Serge Noiret Next Steps for the International Federation Public History News Volume 32 Number 4 September 2012 p 10 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2014 05 17 Retrieved 2014 05 16 Internal Commission for the International Committee of Historical Sciences Archived 2015 09 23 at the Wayback Machine Book Award National Council on Public History Retrieved 2022 03 31 For an overview of these see Margaret Conrad Jocelyn Letourneau and David Northrup Canadians and Their Pasts An Exploration in Historical Consciousness The Public Historian Vol 31 No 1 February 2009 Connecting Neighbors through their buildings Sumikawa Yasunobu Jatowt Adam 2020 Analyzing history related posts in twitter International Journal on Digital Libraries Springer 22 105 134 doi 10 1007 s00799 020 00296 2 Robert Kelley Memorial Award National Council on Public History Guide to Public history programs ncph org Retrieved 2023 09 08 Postgraduate programm in Public History since 2017 description videos in Greek www eap gr Retrieved 2019 02 12 Manolis Peponas Public History in Greece ifph hypotheses org Retrieved 2019 02 12 Bibliography editAndrew Hurley Beyond Preservation Using Public History to Revitalize Inner Cities Temple University Press 2010 248 pages focus on successful projects in St Louis and other cities What is Public History from the NCPH Reflections on an Idea NCPH s First Decade by Barbara J Howe Chair s Annual Address The Public Historian Vol 11 No 3 Summer 1989 pp 69 85 Public History in Canada Special Issue The Public Historian Vol 30 No 1 Winter 2009 Juniele R Almeida amp Marta G O Rovai ed Introducao a Historia Publica Letra e Voz 2011 first Brazilian public history handbook La Public History una disciplina fantasma in Serge Noiret ed Public History Pratiche nazionali e identita globale Memoria e Ricerca n 37 May August 2011 pp 10 35 together with Premessa per una Federazione Internazionale di Public History pp 5 7 Serge Noiret Internationalizing Public History in Public History Weekly Vol 2 No 34 sept 2014 Irmgard Zundorf Contemporary History and Public History in Docupedia Zeitgeschichte March 16 2017 Marko Demantowsky What is Public History in Public history and school International perspectives 4 37 De Gruyter publishers Boston Berlin 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Public history amp oldid 1197348693, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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