This blog introduces students to the multi-faceted approaches to historical research and writing. In History 380, students will obtain the language of historians—including how to read, write, and speak history.
Monday, September 20, 2010
Primary Source sites
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Week 2: On Objectivity
2. Incarcerated youth had little, if any, social power in or outside the state and larger society, giving them few opportunities to voice their motivations and aspirations as well as their fears and desires.
3. The youths’ limited literacy and ability to write or read in English or Spanish is a fifth challenge in finding sources detailing their experiences, for few left written records.
4. Finally, while reform school and state hospital records and other similar state-generated sources do exist, the institution’s (and state’s) interests--and not the individual’s or collective community’s—are best represented, reflecting the values and ideologies of the state. The sources, therefore, reflect the larger inequalities shaping the imbalanced power relations between the youths and state representatives.
What do you think some of the potential challenges you will have in gathering your research? Bring these questions to the discussion with Prof. Chavez-Garcia!