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http://humanitiesmoments.org/files/original/15/323/James_Meredith_Image.jpg
ba0e7ae1f0bd4e3d86a1cf75073ddfbc
Dublin Core
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Title
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James Meredith at University of Mississippi
Source
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:James_Meredith_OleMiss.jpg
Identifier
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james-meredith-at-university-of-mississippi
Dublin Core
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Graduate Student Summer Residents 2019
Description
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The National Humanities Center's graduate student summer residency program, <a href="https://nationalhumanitiescenter.org/nhc-welcomes-graduate-student-summer-residents/">“Objects and Places in an Inquiry-Based Classroom: Teaching, Learning, and Research in the Humanities”</a> took place July 15–26, 2019. Representing 28 universities in 18 states, these participants worked with leading scholars and educators from across the United States as they learned how to add value to their research by focusing on teaching and learning.
Text
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During the NHC 2019 Graduate Summer Residency Program
Dublin Core
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Kiran Garcha; 35 years old; PhD candidate in the Department of History at University of California, Santa Cruz.
Date
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During the end of my time in college, about 13 years ago.
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Paul Hendrickson, Sons of Mississippi: A Story of Race and its Legacy
Description
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I think I’ve always been an oral historian, but I didn’t always know to call myself one. When I was a young kid, I used to spend countless evening hours bombarding my father—always at the end of his long workdays—with questions about his life in India. He was the only person in my family who was born and raised there. He and my American-born mother decided that life would be easier for my siblings and I if we grew up learning and speaking English alone, and as such, our knowledge of Punjabi was reflected through a scattered and very limited vocabulary. There was a clear cultural gap between my father and his children. My ethnic identity was tied to a place that he had called home for the first twenty-six years of his life, the same place in which I had spent perhaps less than twenty-six days up until my twenties. I wanted to know more about my dad, his life before he had kids, and the part of my own history that remained unknown to me. So I asked him questions…ad nauseam.
As a college student I majored in American Ethnic Studies with a history focus, and in the time leading up to my graduation I came across a few books that would change the direction of my young adulthood and the course of my life more broadly. One such text was Sons of Mississippi: A Story of Race and its Legacy by Paul Hendrickson. Hendrickson is a journalist by training, but this particular text is a history of the integration of the University of Mississippi in 1962. The author tells this story by interviewing some of the major players involved in that tense and violent moment, including James Meredith—the first African American to enroll in the school—as well as a number of sheriffs who coalesced from around the state to prevent Meredith from entering the university. For me, one of the most fascinating aspects of the text was Hendrickson’s conversations with the children—now in adulthood by the time of the book’s publication—of some of these sheriffs, as he examined how they made sense of their parents’ role in this history and their own relationship to this past. These were questions of political inheritance- questions with which we are all confronted at particular moments in our lives. How do we make sense of our familial legacies- the good and the bad? What do we choose to acknowledge, celebrate, reject, or forget? They are inquiries without simple answers, to be sure. Upon finishing Hendrickson’s text, however, I was left with the urgent feeling that, particularly for historians, it is our responsibility to become aware of the histories we are born into. And in many cases when the archives are silent, we may do well to turn our attention to the very people who helped create the past, even if our inquiries are met only with memories.
Title
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The Power of Oral History
Identifier
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power-of-oral-history
American history
Black History
Books & Reading
Family Histories
Oral History
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http://humanitiesmoments.org/files/original/18/474/HM_American_Flag_Image.jpg
5197ae354345ee72bf4310699aefcdcd
Dublin Core
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American Neighborhood
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american-neighborhood
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Title
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Graduate Student Residents 2021
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graduate-student-residents-2021
Text
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NHC
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Carey Kelley, 44, Ph.D. candidate, University of Missouri
Description
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My wanderlust took me to many places around the world where I experienced humanities moments at nearly every turn, but my hometown is where my relationship with the humanities was born.
My childhood in a small town in New Hampshire was steeped in history. Impressive 19th century buildings and covered bridges painted the backdrop of my formative years and the hours of my days were measured by the ringing of Revere bells.
Sarah Josepha Hale also hailed from the same town. Hale wrote, published, and advocated for women’s education, but is most commonly known for her nursery rhyme “Mary Had a Little Lamb.” Our lives were separated by over a century, but our childhood homes were only separated by a driveway and as a result she often came to my mind.
Hale’s life sparked my curiosity about what role women played in American history and how they influenced their world despite the restrictions society placed on them. The constant reminder that women do make history helped foster my interest in the humanities.
Title
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Homegrown
Identifier
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homegrown
American history
History
New Hampshire
Songs
Women's Rights