[IMPORTANT ADDENDUM: As of right now, it kind of looks like americanstudier.org has gone defunct. But I most definitely hope to recreate it, or something like it, in the year(s) to come. So I'll leave this post scheduled and ask still for your input, not only on all these aspects of that prior site but on anything and everything you would like to see, read, find, contribute, etc, on an AmericanStudier website. The sky's the limit, folks! So I'd love to hear your thoughts, even more than I already did.]
On my
ongoing goals for this here AmericanStudier website.
The American Studier website that Graham Beckwith and I
designed and created has been up and running for nearly a year now, and there’s
a lot about it that I’m already proud of for sure. It’s become a very good home
for the daily blog
posts and Memory Day
calendar nominees, which have so far been and might always be the most
consistently updated part of the site. But I’ve also, and even more
importantly, really enjoyed the chance to include and highlight the voices and
ideas of fellow American Studiers: in the Analytical
Pieces section; in Forum
posts; and in suggestions for Archives,
Collections and other Resources, to name
three places that have been constructed out of those other voices. My most
central goal for the site is that it become generally communal and
collaborative, and these represent definite starting points in that direction.
I’d love
to build each of those sections further in the year(s) ahead, so if you have:
briefer American Studies questions, perspectives, interests, and thoughts,
create a Forum thread; longer analytical takes that haven’t found a home (or
that have but to which I can link), share ‘em (brailton@fitchburgstate.edu) for the
Analytical Pieces section; suggestions for good American Studies Resources
(online, archives and collections, in any of that page’s categories, etc.),
send ‘em along; and so on. But I’m even more interested in seeing what we can
do with the least developed (to date) part of the site, the Multimedia page. As you
can see, I’ve created some preliminary categories and have posted a few
examples for each; I’d love if every American Studier who visits this site
could share one or another text (available, at least in part, online) that he
or she believes we should all engage, making that page a genuine database of
American Studies primary sources. But I’m also open to other ways to think
about American Studies and to analyze our history, culture, identity,
narratives, and so on—so if you have suggestions on how a page like that could
be constructed, please send ‘em my way (again, brailton@fitchburgstate.edu) and I’ll
make sure to credit you and your work.
Those are
some of my ideas and hopes. But the truth, to get all Rumsfeld-ian for a
moment, is that I don’t know what I don’t know, and I need your help on that
front even more fully. I’d say that’s particularly true when it comes to
teachers, professors, and program directors in American Studies—what would
benefit you all when it comes to a site like this? We could create a whole Pedagogy
page, for example—what would you like to see there? What kinds of materials and
resources could make your jobs easier, would benefit your students, could help
you use a site like this in a course or the like? I’ll ask the same question of
students, at every level—what could this site include and do to help you in
your work? Ditto for researchers and scholars outside of any academic or
educational setting—what would help you pursue your interests or work? No
matter who or where you are, the simple fact is this: I would love to get a
sense of those things, of what brings you to the site and of what could make it
even more successful as a resource for you. That question, in any and every
form, is what I hope will drive my—our—work on the site as it and we move
forward.
Next
series next week,
Ben
PS. You
know what to do! Answers to any and all those questions, now and at any moment
down the road, will be greatly appreciated and very valuable.
12/17 Memory Day nominees: A tie between two
unique, talented,
and influential
20th century cultural
and artistic figures, Arthur
Fiedler and Erskine Caldwell.
12/18 Memory Day nominee: Ossie
Davis, for his
lifetime of charistmatic
performances, his career
of impassioned
activism, and his inspiring marriage.
And that’s it, a whole year of Memory Day nominees! See the Memory Day
Calendar for the complete current roster, and please share your own nominations
as Comments there!
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