Shared historical authority
Shared historical authority is a current trend in
Definition
The concept of shared historical
Typical examples of shared historical authority include:
- A museum inviting a community artist to create and install a work of historically inspired public art on their site.
- A historical society providing gallery space for community groups to display their own exhibitions.
- Web-based projects that invite and display user-generated components.
- Using oral and written histories contributed by individuals outside the strictly academic community in conjunction with more traditional scholarly essays, text panels or exhibit labels.
- A historic house tour where visitors are encouraged to explore on their own and draw their own conclusions.[citation needed]
- Community curation - "crowdsourcing" related content from subaltern groups
In each case the institution serves as a catalyst for non-traditional participants to contribute to a body of information presented to the public. The institution uses its resources - e.g. staff expertise, collections, public space - to help non-traditional participants share their contributions in publicly accessible and engaging ways. At its most basic, shared authority turns people who would otherwise be historical consumers (visitors and audiences) into participants and co-generators of historical content for public display. Museums who coordinate programs that share historical authority often wish to imbue a sense of democratization to the historical narrative, in contrast to the top-down historical narratives that sometimes emerge in museums. In addition, shared authority projects frequently try to involve communities who have traditionally been disenfranchised or underrepresented in historical narratives and institutions, providing a platform for alternative voices to engage in a public historical dialogue.[citation needed] The role of shared historical authority continues to be debated in the field of public history.
History of the idea
The need for museums and other historical institutions to "share authority" with their audiences and surrounding communities is rooted in the ideologies of New Social History and social constructivism. Both paradigms reject the concept of a "master narrative" for describing historical events, finding it an inadequate method for representing the multiple experiences and perspectives of individuals involved. Arising from the work of folklorists such as John Lomax and Alan Lomax, New Deal-era Works Progress Administration (WPA) programs such as the Federal Writers' Project and the work of Studs Terkel, the social history movement of the 1960s placed new academic emphasis on the experiences of people not represented in traditional or "official" historical narratives, and gave further impetus to projects focused on collecting and sharing those experiences.[1]
Michael Frisch, a professor at the
Beginning in the early 2000s, the proliferation of Web 2.0 technologies that allow users to easily create and share content on digital platforms offered historical institutions a variety of new tools to facilitate public participation.
Case studies
Other examples of shared historical authority include StoryCorps, the City of Memory, and Philaplace, an internet-based neighborhood history project produced by the Historical Society of Philadelphia that combines scholarly essays with stories from anyone who cares to submit one. Staff members then curate the submitted stories. Dennis Severs House is a historic townhouse in London (18 Folgate St.) that was restored by Dennis Severs. The house is filled with historic objects alongside modern touches, sound clips of carriages and crying babies, and plates of real food set out each day by the staff. Visitors are encouraged to roam the house on their own, sit down on the furniture, interact with other visitors, and draw their own conclusions. The experience is meant to blur the lines between art and history.[citation needed]
The
- "Spend extended time inside the Levine and Rogarshevsky apartments and join in a discussion about themes arising from the tour. Share your experiences, thoughts, and family histories with your educator and fellow visitors."[3]
Open House: If These Walls Could Talk is an exhibition that was produced by the
The Black Bottom Performance Project is a partnership between the
The
The Humanities Truck is an experimental mobile platform for collecting, exhibiting, preserving, and expanding the dialogue around the humanities in and around the Washington, D.C. area. The project, which is sponsored by American University and is initially funded through a generous grant from the Henry Luce Foundation, enables partnerships with local organizations to collect people’s stories on critical issues, such as immigration and homelessness. The truck is fitted with a recording studio, mobile workshop space, and a gallery for pop-up exhibits that features built-in speakers, a flat-screen television, a roll-down screen and projector, and even an outside exhibit wall.[6] Humanities Truck project fellows share historical authority with the communities with which they work.
Criticism
Despite the interest and affirmation that sharing authority is currently receiving in museum and public humanities circles, there are scholars and practitioners who criticize the practice. Generally, these criticisms are aimed at one of two levels. First, some scholars suggest that the phrase itself is wrong. "Sharing authority" implies that the process is something museums/archives do rather than something that just "is." In his essay for Letting Go?, Michael Frisch suggests that a more appropriate formulation of the concept is "a shared authority."[7]
- "a shared authority"... suggests something that 'is'-- that in the nature of oral and public history, we are not the sole interpreters. Rather, the interpretive and meaning-making process is in fact shared by definition-- it is inherent in the dialogic nature of an interview, and in how audiences receive and respond to exhibitions and public history interchanges in general.[7]
Scholars and artists also worry that sharing authority devalues the hard-won expertise of professionals. The artist
Further reading
- Adair, Bill, Benjamin Filene and Laura Koloski. Letting Go?: Sharing Historical Authority in a User Generated World. Philadelphia: The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage, 2011. See "Pew Center for Arts & Heritage."
- Bishop, Claire. "The Social Turn: Collaboration and Its Discontents." ARTFORUM.Feb. 2006.
- Lubar, Steven. "Books: Letting Go? Sharing Historical Authority in a User-Generated World." Curator 55:2 (2012). 233-236.
- Simon, Nina. The Participatory Museum. Santa Cruz: MUSEUM 2.0, 2010. Online version: http://www.participatorymuseum.org/read/
References
- ISBN 978-0-9834803-0-3.
- ISBN 978-0-9834803-0-3.
- ^ "Sweatshop Workers: Tour & Discussion". Tour the Building. Lower East Side Tenement Museum. 2011. Retrieved December 21, 2011.
- ISBN 978-0-9834803-0-3
- ISBN 978-0-9834803-0-3
- ^ Housman, Patty (August 28, 2018). "AU's New Humanities Truck Hits the Road: Gathering Stories in DC communities". American University's College of Arts and Sciences News. Retrieved February 16, 2019.
- ^ a b Frisch in Letting Go?, p. 127.
- ^ Letting Go?. p. 207.
- ^ Fred Wilson, Paula Marincola, and Marjorie Schwarzer, Mining the Museum Revisited: A Conversation. in Letting Go?. p. 237.
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