Using Public History to Study Modern Feminism

April 13, 2024·
Nancy Beck Young
,
Rahil Asgari
,
Cady Hammer
,
Peggy Lindner
,
Allison Perlman
,
Elizabeth Rodwell
,
Leandra Zarnow
· 1 min read
Image credit: Peggy Lindner
Date
April 13, 2024 1:30 PM — 3:00 PM
Location

Salt Lake City, Utah

events

The participants for this roundtable are all working on the National Endowment for the Humanities-funded digital humanities project, “Sharing Stories from 1977: Putting the National Women’s Conference on the Map.” Our work is rooted in public history methodologies and theory: shared authority, public-facing work, and collaborative scholarship that is generated as much for a public audience as an academic one. We hope that our work will inspire other scholars to undertake public history in the digital space and will also showcase how this approach can revolutionize the study of more traditional topics like women’s history and political history.