About this book
Editors: Allison Guess & Prithi Kanakamedala
Essays by: Gabrielle Bendiner-Viani, Hatuey Ramos-Fermín, Maggie Schreiner, Molly Garfinkel, Rebecca Amato, Sady Sullivan, Samip Mallick, Shawn(ta) Smith-Cruz, Walis Johnson, Yvette Ramírez
104 pages, perfect-bound, book design by Partner & Partners, published by the Center for the Humanities at the Graduate Center, CUNY.
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This book is sponsored by The City Amplified: Oral Histories and Radical Archiving research team as part of the Seminar on Public Engagement and Collaborative Research from the Center for the Humanities at The Graduate Center, CUNY, generously funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
The City Amplified: Oral Histories and Radical Archives (edited by Allison Guess & Prithi Kanakamedala) is a book of ten commissioned essays by archivists, activists, artists, and historians that reflects the creative and intellectual energy of the City Amplified working group. The essays explore the meaning of community-centered oral history archives and the ethics of archival work, rooted in a local context. The book also includes a detailed resource guide for those looking to start a community oral history project. The book features representatives of community partners such as The Laundromat Project, Interference Archive, Buscada, City Lore, South Asian American Digital Archive, Urban Democracy Lab, New York Public Library, American Social History Project, and others.
CONTENTS:
Introduction
COMMUNITY BUILDING
SAADA’s "Where We Belong Project" – From Theory to Practice
Archiving Black Lesbians in Practice: The Salsa Soul Sisters Archival Collection
Building Activist Capacity Through Memory Work
LISTENING
Sustaining Collaboration is a Skill
De-Radicalizing Public Engagement
NYSCA Living Traditions: Safeguarding Tradition Beyond the Physical Archive
The Repositories of Memories that We All Carry Within
HONORING MEMORY
The Artist and the Radical Archive
Telling Totes at the Essex Street Market
Juxtaposition: The Case for the Radically Open Archive
If You’re Thinking About Starting An Oral History Project
Sady Sullivan with Maggie Schreiner