ABSTRACT

Pedagogies of Public Memory explores opportunities for writing and rhetorical education at museums, archives, and memorials. Readers will follow students working and writing at well-known sites of international interest (e.g., the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum), at local sites (e.g., vernacular memorials in and around Muncie, Indiana and the Central Pennsylvania African American Museum in Reading, Pennsylvania), and in digital spaces (e.g., Florida State University’s Postcard Archive and The Women’s Archive Project at the University of Nebraska Omaha). From composing and delivering museum tours, to designing online  memorials that challenge traditional practices of public grief, to producing and publishing a magazine containing the photographs and stories of individuals who lived through historic moments in the Freedom Struggle, to expanding and creating new public archives – the pedagogical projects described in this volume create richly textured learning opportunities for students at all levels – from first-year writers to graduate students. The students and faculty whose work is represented in this volume undertake to reposition the past in the present and to imagine possible new futures for themselves and their communities. By exploring the production of public memory, this volume raises important new questions about the intersection of rhetoric and remembrance.

chapter |32 pages

Introduction

Complicating Conversations: Public Memory Production and Composition & Rhetoric

part |55 pages

Museums

chapter |12 pages

Remembering the Children of Lodz

Conducting Public Research with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in a First-Year Writing Course

chapter |14 pages

Sitting Still in the Right Places

Remembering and Writing Civil Rights History in Prince Edward County, Virginia

chapter |13 pages

“Keepers of Memory”

First-Year Writers and the Central Pennsylvania African American Museum

chapter |15 pages

Learning Out Loud

Freeman Tilden, Interpretation, and Rhetorical Performance at The National Museum of Toys and Miniatures

part |43 pages

Archives

chapter |14 pages

A Pedagogy for the Ethics of Remembering

Producing Public Memory for the Women's Archive Project

chapter |12 pages

Talking Back

Writing Assistants Renegotiate the Public Memory of Writing Centers

chapter |16 pages

“Many Happy Returns”

Student Archivists as Curators of Public Memory

part |51 pages

Memorials

chapter |12 pages

Writing on the Frontlines of Public Memory

English and History Undergraduates Contributing to the Flight 93 Oral History Project

chapter |13 pages

Teaching and Inventing Public Memorials

Chicago Women Rhetors

chapter |11 pages

In Loving Memory

Vernacular Memorials and Engaged Writing