Author Archive

Telling Tales: Oral History and the 2010 Canadian Historical Association Congress

June 7, 2010

This year’s Congress of the Canadian Historical Association (CHA) took place at Concordia University from 28 May – 1 June in Montreal with over 500 delegates in attendance. As the largest gathering of historians in Canada each year, the CHA Congress offers participants both an opportunity to network with colleagues across the country while also discussing both scholarly and mundane issues that are especially pertinent to Canadian universities. 

Eugen von Blaas, "An Interesting Story" (Wiki Commons)

Eugen von Blaas, "An Interesting Story" (Wiki Commons)

The undisputed central theme of the congress was oral history and its place in contemporary scholarship, reflected most notably in the choice of Joy Parr (University of Western Ontario) as this year’s keynote speaker.  Parr’s work linking the changing use of spaces in the environment and oral history is in many ways emblematic of the recent surge in environmental history and its developing methodologies. 

Her recent book, Sensing Changes: Technologies, Environments, and the Everyday, 1953-2003 (2009) explores the consequences of state-driven construction projects on rural and First Nations communities while contextualizing and mapping change over time upon individual bodies.  Her keynote address, ‘“Don’t Speak for Me”: Oral History amongst Vulnerable Populations’ also raised many issues and challenges facing historians embarking upon historical projects that utilize oral sources. (more…)

Playing at Home: Interdisciplinarity and the Institute for the Public Life of Arts and Ideas

April 27, 2010

The Institute for the Public Life of Arts and Ideas (IPLAI) at McGill has emerged over the past year as a force to be reckoned in the expanding field of interdisciplinary endeavors in the humanities and social sciences. Under the visionary leadership of Professor Desmond Manderson, IPLAI’s mandate has been (in a rather open way) about playing with disciplines and methodologies in the name of creating something new and artistic. This post, I would like to describe the activities of this remarkable institute and comment upon the importance of interdisciplinary solutions in creating a publicly oriented body of knowledge transcending traditional academia. 

Streetcar construction in Washington DC c. 1927 (Wiki Commons)

Streetcar construction in Washington DC c. 1927 (Wiki Commons)

With an impressive parade of visiting scholars such as Roger Chartier, Eliza Slavet and Richard Sherwin leading this charge, it is no wonder that the institute has already set the bar quite high for interdisciplinary cooperation among law, humanities and social science faculties. It’s projects over the past year included a two-day symposium  entitled “Imagining the Child : Imaginer l’enfant”, which sought to incorporate methodologies from law, the humanities and social sciences in order to interrogate the historical and contemporary representation and construction of childhood within the public sphere. 

During term, the institute also hosts a weekly coffee hour for faculty and students that are curious or interested in interdisciplinary pursuits at the university. This helps to quite literally maintain the ‘playfullness’ of a coffee-house setting, which in many ways is a guiding metaphor for the institute as a  whole. Finally, this summer the institute will be hosting a three-day workshop for graduate students with a focus on the application of interdisciplinary theories and methods of cultural scholars such as Latour and Derrida(more…)

Beyond Books: Movement, Maps and the ‘Technological Turn’ in History

April 13, 2010

The use of new technology in research is one of the most pressing (and competitive) issues for emerging historians.  For those of us far enough along in our research to understand its importance, but inadequately trained in its use, it can be a positively terrifying experience. In light of Laura’s recent post lauding ‘experimental’ and ‘playful’ approaches to incorporating technology into the process of doing history and my own warnings about forgetting the lessons learned through decades of ‘old school’ archival research, I thought it might be useful to provide some insight into a few of my own technological ambitions and frustrations.

To students and the uninitiated, the history of popular printing in eighteenth-century Scotland might seem a bit dry.

17th Century Map of London (Wiki Commons)

17th Century Map of London (Wiki Commons)

Thus, after several attempts at verbally explaining to several friends how the printing industry changed over the course of the century, I thought it might be better to show them instead. But how should I start? As a social-cultural historian with lots of theory and archival experience, but limited technological training, I had no shortage of ideas – but very few ways of implementing them. (more…)

Doing Local History: Card Catalogues, Manual Searches and Historiography

March 30, 2010

After spending much of the last two weeks performing research in Edinburgh and Glasgow, I have a new appreciation for manual approaches to cataloguing material in local archives. During this post, I would like to spend some time re-evaluating the utility and challenges of both manual and electronic search tools to historical research in libraries and archives, while also reflecting upon their importance to larger developments in historical scholarship.

 Despite the predilection among historians to explain the minutiae of theoretical perspectives and methodological choices in selecting archival evidence to make historical claims, the organization and technology used in

Card Catalogue (Wiki Commons)

Card Catalogue (Wiki Commons)

archives is rarely mentioned. Older technology remains a fact of life in many smaller or local archives and proficiency in their use is important for anyone starting graduate studies or supplementing work performed at larger institutions.

 Manual catalogues can be a nightmare for users. As a social-cultural historian of the print trade, the National Archives of Scotland’s name-based Court of Session holdings and the National Library’s accession-date manuscript catalogues have presented me with numerous challenges due to their lack of occupational search options. Addressing this issue has both widened and contextualized the original scope of my research by forcing me to engage with and account for contradictions and inconsistencies of sources that don’t fit neatly into narrow lines of enquiry.

 Nevertheless, card catalogues and paper indices are often extremely versatile in placing search terms in proximity to one another in ways that users of electronic catalogues no longer employ with regularity, such as ‘shelf searches’ or specialized ‘subject trees’ that enable researchers to view related holdings upon a single page.

 But despite a widespread belief that the lack of online search options in smaller archives is simply an issue of technological availability, this issue has become central to the way that both graduate students and faculty formulate questions and conduct their research. I can’t help but wondering if the recent turn towards ‘global’ or ‘interregional’ perspectives has come about in part due to the centralization of source material and networking amongst larger archives and institutions. While useful in itself, this has come at the expense of exploring questions of local significance.

Manual catalogues also contain certain advantages that should be built upon in the development of electronic search tools. One of these is to partially duplicate the process of ‘editing’ in manual catalogues through the open modification of electronic archival records by users – a ‘Wikipedia’ approach to archival research. This enables users to provide both individualized feedback on particular sources while also providing a collective interpretive framework with potential future value for historians.

Another way of incorporating the methods of manual catalogues into electronic searches is through the broadening of individual search results to include a greater range of information on the provenance of records within their original accession. Admittedly, this is often difficult as local or private collections are donated and ‘incorporated’ into larger institutions, but can provide crucial information about textual hierarchies and intertextual relationships that can remain otherwise obscured.

None of this should be taken as an argument that libraries and archives shouldn’t seeke every opportunity to expand the technological abilities of users to search for and access historical sources. But in doing so we must be aware of technological inequalities and relatively recent inclusion in the process of historical research. Furthermore, by continuing to favour the ‘central’ over the ‘local’ through the rubrick of accessibility, we affect the types of questions asked and replicate logical (but extant) divisions within our discipline.

2010 McGill-Queen’s Graduate Conference in History: Part Two – Networks and Triumphs

March 16, 2010
Arc de Triomphe, Paris (Wiki Commons)

Arc de Triomphe, Paris (Wiki Commons)

After 68 papers and two event-filled days, the 2010 McGill-Queen’s Graduate Conference in History has finally ended. The range of papers was diverse, but in some ways telling, of current trends in graduate student research. A full 13 of the 21 panels were devoted either wholly or in large part to twentieth-century history, with very few on the Medieval or Early Modern periods. Secondly, a full third of the papers focused on the history of North America with other large contributions by papers on empire and the ‘Atlantic World’.

One of the most interesting aspects of the conference was the diverse ways in which the presenters engaged with this year’s theme of ‘networks’. As a modern ‘global’ (or at least trans-regional) approach to history takes the limelight, the issue of networks has taken on special significance (and raised important questions) for historians seeking to connect a long list of actors and events over an ever-widening historical geography. (more…)

2010 McGill-Queen’s Graduate Conference in History: Part One – Preparation and Inspiration

March 2, 2010

On 12 and 13 March, McGill will host the seventh annual McGill-Queen’s Graduate Conference in History with the theme of ‘Making Networks: Making History / Construire des réseaux: Faire d’histoire‘. As one of the organizing committee chairs I have both the privilege and misfortune of overseeing every small triumph and glitch in the long and convoluted process of bringing this large and unwieldy creature to life. As this is my sophomore run in organizing this particular conference, I thought it would be interesting to reflect on some of the lessons and challenges from the past few years and give some attention to the continuing importance and innovative spirit of graduate student-led projects.  

Some of the most daunting challenges I have faced in organizing this project were among the most mundane in nature.

C. Maccari, 'Cicero Denounces Catiline' (Wiki Commons)

C. Maccari, 'Cicero Denounces Catiline' (Wiki Commons)

Booking spaces, drafting programmes and securing keynote speakers are all fraught with tiny time-consuming details that leave even the most organized of spirits exhausted. But while these issues are easily solved, a greater problem lies in organizing panels and speakers in a way that helps incite constructive dialogue and generate interest both within and beyond the wider academic community.   (more…)

Colm Tóibín and Oscar Wilde: Duality, Silence and Methods in Gay History

February 16, 2010

One of the highlights of this past week was a visit to McGill by the award-winning Irish author and critic Colm Tóibín, who gave both a public lecture and seminar in connection with the McGill Institute for Gender, Sexuality and Feminist Studies. His lecture, entitled “Oscar Wilde in Prison”, addressed both the link between Wilde’s experience in prison and his subsequent writing and the problem of relating the silences in source materials to a narrative of gay history.

Upon entering the lecture theatre I thought, with naïve arrogance, that I had read or heard just about every possible argument about Oscar Wilde’s life, the significance of his experiences for gay history

Oscar Wilde (Wiki Commons)

Oscar Wilde (Wiki Commons)

and identity, and the defining aspects of his work as influenced by his trial and imprisonment.  I was dead wrong. What Tóibín presented was the most eloquent and comprehensive account of Wilde’s life and work that I have ever heard.

One of the major themes of the lecture was the persistent dualities that defined Wilde’s actions and identities. This theme represented as having particular literary and historical importance for understanding Wilde’s ultimate downfall after his unsuccessful defamatory libel suit against the Marquess of Queensberry in 1895. (more…)

Making Publics: Social Networking, Sustainability and the Future in Digital Humanities

February 2, 2010

In anticipation of its final conference, taking place at McGill from March 18 – 20, 2010, I thought it might be useful to say a few words about the technologically innovative Making Publics (MaPs) project as it has unfolded over the past five years.

Beginning in 2005 and funded through a Social Science and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Major Collaborative Research Initiatives grant, the project has brought together academics from an array of disciplines in order to ‘illuminate the artistic, intellectual, scientific, religious and political culture of Britain and Western Europe’ and to develop ‘an interdisciplinary methodology’ through a commitment to accessibility and innovative modes of learning.    (more…)

1688 and the Problem of Modernity

January 19, 2010

If there is one quality that I admire more than any other among historians, it is the willingness to ruffle a few feathers in the pursuit of a strongly held conviction. For an early modernist to do this makes me especially proud, considering that it is tempting to say that some of our conferences have resembled an exercise in kicking dead equines. But every so often someone manages to find a topic with a bit of kick left. Steve Pincus does just that – and more – by considerably raising the bar for both research and argument in his book,  1688: The First Modern Revolution. So now that all of the critics have weighed in, where does this volume stand, both on its own and in respect to other works on the so-called “Glorious Revolution?”

This is partly a trick question as, in many respects, Pincus’ book isn’t really about a “Glorious Revolution” at all. Instead, it draws our attention to two competing visions of modernity – one absolute and territorial, the other contractual and commercial – that sought to establish themselves through largely violent means. Indeed, one of the best aspects of the book is that it does a masterful job at representing James VII and II as an active, if disingenuous, participant in attempting to realize an absolutist state modeled on Louis XIV’s France.  But the book’s central claim – that this episode represents the first modern revolution – is both contentious and problematic despite a well-supported argument about its global repercussions. (more…)

The Politics of Digital Reproduction: A Case for Scottish History

January 5, 2010

Although it might be suspected that someone specializing in eighteenth-century Scottish popular printing and culture would have an aversion to the tactile-free medium of a digital reproduction, the truth is quite the opposite.  The digitization of historical records and their subsequent utility (and malleability) in electronic formats provides a major impetus for historians in a wide array of sub-disciplines to engage dynamically with materials that might otherwise remain unused.

Nevertheless, several major problems remain in the development and use of digital images for historical scholarship. In the recent past, the demand for digitized material has been met unequally along national and linguistic divisions in terms of both the type and number of digitized sources available. 

For British history, this has been most visible in the disparity between efforts to catalogue English and Scottish historical records. Cases in point include the lack of comprehensive Scottish digital collections for news media and legal records to match the mostly English 17th and 18th Century Burney Collection Newspapers and the Proceedings of the Old Bailey (POB).  Additionally, even collections that purport to include a broad array of ‘British’ sources, such as the Eighteenth Century Collections Online (ECCO), actually contain very few Scottish titles.

If this is the case, then what are its causes? Is this simply the result of insufficient funding, or has the digitization of Scottish social and culturalrecords been derailed by other factors? In short, what are the political factors in play in the preservation and digitization of Scottish historical sources?  (more…)

This isn’t a Jubilee year…

December 9, 2009

The Canadian and Northeast American Societies for Eighteenth-Century Studies (CSECS and NEASECS) recently held their annual conference in Ottawa on the theme of ’1759: Making and Unmaking Empires’. A number of papers – particularly those by Joan Coutu (Waterloo) and David McNeil (Dalhousie) – sought to represent the importance of this pivotal year through the reconstruction of both the short and long-term legacies of historical figures such as James Wolfe.

The Death of General Wolfe by Benjamin West (Wiki Commons)

While the papers were singularly relevant and useful for getting at a broader examination of the eighteenth-century empire-building process, the conference theme raised several important issues. First, the concept of employing historical anniversaries in order to publicize scholarly work is itself fraught with problems as it implicitly ties disciplinary considerations to the larger public processes of commemoration and political debate that are largely manifested outside of academia. (more…)

We’re Going Dutch…but hold the roast beef and windmills

November 24, 2009

As most in the history world have already heard, Lisa Jardine was recently awarded the Cundill Prize for her 2008 publication, Going Dutch: How England Plundered Holland’s Glory. The ceremony, held at McGill on November 2, made me think about how the requirements for prize – “exceptional scholarship, written quality, original presentation and broad accessibility” – are reflected in Jardine’s work. In particular, I was first intrigued by how her work fulfilled the requirement of accessibility and what this says about similar historical writing that is directed at a “general readership”. Without a doubt, this book is a tour de force of the vast range of Dutch cultural influence on English social, cultural and political life – and with a $36 price-tag it provides an incredible array of seventeenth-century portraiture, architectural engravings and scientific illustrations.

De molen bij Wijk bij Duurstede - Rijksmuseum Amsterdam - National Museum for Art and History.

Jacob van Ruisdael, The Windmill at Wijk bij Duurstede, 1670. Wikimedia Commons.

(more…)


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