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tv   OAH President Anthea Hartig  CSPAN  June 22, 2024 12:00pm-12:36pm EDT

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and joining us now on c span is anthea hartig. shehe organizing session of american historians, which is what? well, since 1907, the age has been in service as a nonprofit and association of historians, mostly in the early days and teaching at universities. but now our membership spans museum curators, high school history teachers, and, of course, including junior college and for year and beyond, colleges. and really kind of coming together in a community historians, as you can see behind us, of course, the most
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of the university presses who come and honor scholars work by orth. but the organization headquartered in bloominon indiana, is at the university of indiana. there has been serving and continuing to refine its mission to really understand what it means to be in service to the field. how we help educators, how we help policymakers understand the past's relevance to our contemporary lives, and to the future. the american historical association? mm. h i, i jokingly call them kind of grandma and grandpa, you know, slightly different, you know, olde institution. there's age is a little older ages scope includes all historians in the united states working on the whole range of global issues, including u.s. history and the age. really focuses on historians all over the world, but who . so it's kind of a different kind of lens through which to see the profession. can you be a member of both nations? yeah, i am. yeah. and what is your background?
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what is your study? field of study? i came up through ucla's history department as an undergraduate and then went to university of california, riverside, as well as and mary for my graduate studies. and i fell in love very way in which we shaped the land, which we shapehich with what we leave, material, that kind of material culture of our lives. and so i've been very fortunate to work as a public servant for two cities. i've served on state commissions. i've mostly worked in the nonprofit world, and i was running the california historical society in san when the smithsonian came calling which is a very rd call not to take. so i was honored to be in that candidate pool, to be the first woman director of the national museum of american history. and so that really has continued. mykioined love of making history accessible and meaningful and relevant in our lives. and like this conference that i
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as you're as president, you help sculpt the main themes of the year ends your service year ends as president with the conference. technically is the conference, that program committee and local arrangements committee that i helped create have shaped. and the overarching theme is how are we in service to communities? how do we help communiti both make themselves feel like they have agency in this world, that they are part of the great span of history? and not that history is something that's fossilized or r didn't happen to their communities. so i scale. at the nation's flagship history museum right there on the national mall. and then as my service to the helping, i think, other historians throughout the nation and the world think about their roles in their commities. should we know history? why is it important? risure. well, great question for me. b set of tools, which i think should be as democratic or used as possible as a toolkit of history, if you
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will. i joke that we it's not neuroscience. we don't operate on brains, but like to change minds, right, by understanding and interpre complexities of that past that we've all inherited. history for me also kind of unlocked some pretty great mysteries of love, of life, of things and studying the past, i think is can be a very active and very meaningful way in which we engage our present selves, which we understand)4oñur families, in which we understand our land and our ourselves as political leaders and lowercase p. both kind of actors in this kind of great stage called life and i also find it utterly fascinating and endlessly fascinating. it would be better to understand history as very much something that is alive that that truly can inform, you know, the adage
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that history repeats itself. history's been very busy lately. it's been watching you. it's been judging you. and history doesn't do anything. historians using the tools of research and scholarship and analysis and interpretation. historians do things right but history has been in the news quite a bit and employed right in different ways, rhetorically, in so i find it just endlessly fascinating thehistory can be both a tool of empowerment, a tool of oppression, a tool of repression andssion, but also, i think, a understand the fullness of where we are a where we've come from. and i don't necessarily think it's humanly possibledictate that history can repeat itself. but i do sometimes like to think
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of it as kind of folding in on itself, like an origami of time where you realize that maybe the edges are touching, right? that t a that there's a a parallel kind of fold that that in knowing one of the folds right. helps you understand the opposite. one. so as director of the american history museum how much do you how much time do you spend with scholastic historians? i am incredibly fortunate to have dozensns on staff kind of joined with me at the national museum of american history, which is a long tradition of bringing inscholars in certain fields. we just ran into one who specialized in the history of food and the history of brewing and whether they are specializing in the history of transportation history of modern science, the history of music, the history of popular culture the history of political
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s. it is an incredible kind of group of scholars who choose then to work at the smithsonian and inton, but who choose to work in ways that use material culture, that use the millions of objects that we hold in stewardship for the american people. in our collection to really help tell those stories and enliven the past in ways that truly archival material, which we also have miles of linear feet of joining, if you will, our federal partners at the national congress. but if you then history as an oral traditions, the written word printed word, and the objects that we have created and that we've handed down in time, i think you have an incredibly opportunity to tell a very dense, meaningful stories,then to figure out how to interpret those not in beautiful books that are surrounding us here in the exhibit hall, but
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in. 75 words, you know, on an exhibit text. so there's a i le that at7lso that kind of that art of that. right. of how that you distill. let's say, 18 pages of historiographical materl, 250 objects that relate to what you want to tell. how do you bring that, you know, into an accessible, meaningful, hopefully multilingual, full set of words that help people understand the relationship that they might have with that object? so challenge, that kind of curatorial process i find really fascinating and i'm so fortunate to have such great colleags and every so often and more frequently now we see an article about college jazz cutting their humanities fire. why, in this age of history or even going to so that that kind of ebb and flow, i think especially of of academic history departments in
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the history wars of the nineties that probably both of us mber. i, i, i see in a couple first one is that the contestation over memory of how weber, what we remember, how we are taught, what is taught is as old as the profession itself, right? which let's say you can take it back to the greeks, but let's say from the 1880s onward, when historians started going to graduate school, self-identify fying as his there's always been that that that kind of tensionetween what is shared, what is taught how it's perceived. so that's an old art that the newer kind of i think and more troubling art right now is that it's the division, the devaluation. i'm thinking vanities of how we learn about each other throughout time and the humanities as a touchstone, i think has sustained our civilizations since the earliest ones in slightly different forms. and i'm not taking a totally
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kind of eurocentric perspective of this, but history andand that which we remember, that which which we passed down to generation to generation is one of the sustaining through lines of our shared humanity. and i think disruptions in that kind of dictatorial. you know, the gag orders that la in place limit them age to your point where information is all tools of critical reading and critical thinking, how then can we or our our our children, our grandchildren, then kind ascertain truth from photograph from a completely created one? if we're not kind of training ourselves. and i, you know, to, you know ability to think critically and ascertain critically, i think we're losing. so much of what what makes the human experience.
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secretary lonnie bunch, you know for whom i work, says it so well when he says that to to find and locate and be unafraid of the full is history is is then when we know you know the most we can about that and stopping that or shaping that. know, is a form of censorship that the united states in particular has wrestled with for from its inception. a particularly grist. grist where the grist mill of history, my dear, when it comes to the american history museum, which you run. has tech impacted how you display things? oh, absolutely. and some really wonderful ways actually. so if you come into any of our newer exhibits and you are blind or low vision, we have on the floor your cane would tap to just elegant, maybe ten inch long, just slightly stainless steel
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plates and they're dirt tap plates then you would know thatcan either touch or feel. and so like a fu cast bronze cast of dorothy's ruby slippers, every sequence for you to to feel. and then you'd also know that there would be a qr code, that your phone wouldou pass if you have earphones in, or if you wanted to listen to it, that you then would hear what the label that certainly we may have had a decade ago or two decades ago, but that wasn't employed as readily or as thoughtfully without the technology we have today. and so that's just one example of how technology can make accessible. what's the downside of you know, people have been arguing about technology. you know, probably since the first time machine. iover what technological advances, what innovation, what invention does to both the arts
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the crafts, people's livelihoods so that you can see it in a long arc. artificial intelligence is notw thing. the the can be tricky or any of the chat like one core element that has a lot ofple uneasy when you can ask it to write a pr bio or my bio, and it's, it's not how fed you because we have the history of computing in the collection. those curators in particular are fascinating to tal long, kind of complicated dance of our uneasiness with technology. they go back to what something i go in terms of helping people ascertain and have knowledge of what's generated through especially advanced a.i. think it kind of comes back to some of the same read something today and you about that's about advanced a.i.
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taking over our writing. and you realize, no, it was about a typewriter or it was about some other technological moment where that paradigm d that kind of koonin paradigm was shifting, and there was inordinate fear around that. and i think one of the museums roles is to help people with some of those big changes. there have been life in our lifetimes or in t're thinking about those revolutions as we careen towards 2026, which will be the 250th anniversary of the signing of the declaration of so we're asking ourselves, what's revolutionary? truly drafting that document was revolutionary we have a lot of material from the revolutionary war in the early of our oldest material, and surprisingly. but we also are asking ourselves, well, what what truths are self-evident? how are we created equal or not? what moments=w in time have been revolutionary?
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the last 250 years? and what objects are also revolutionary? thomas jefferson's writing desk on which he drafted the declaration. ie can call that a revolutionary object. the gunboat. philadelphia, from 1776, the first commissioned land, three boats in what was that would become the us navy, but wasn't yet when she was sunk in the battle of lake champlain in october square foot revolution, very object. but you know what else the other 248? so we're we're embarking on a really exciting journey to think about thes centennial in ways that are both kind of predictable that you'd want to washington the summer of 2026 but also ways that get you what a what quiet revolutions are are. one of my curators in home and community life division brought
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forth the first commercially produced crackpot as a revolution or object just for the first time, you can put that on in the morning and come back 8 hours later and actually have dinner and not tend to it all day, you know? so for working women, was that a revolutionary object? i'm sure for many. i asked my mom, she's like, oh you know? so we find those entry points into the past where people both kind of identify with an object. and because we have such a rich collection, there are so many, i think, to choose from. and then we take them. we can really taketh us, and then they can also helps contribution shows to our understanding. to really create that richness and that fullness of our monochromatic, it's not mono linear,'s it's rich and dynamic andand colorful and and complicated. how do you avoid
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politicizing history? arkin hmm. great question sir. so the smithsonian i'm very consciously but lonnie, secretary bunch, all, i think, believe that, of course as human beihis country, with our freedoms, our constitutional freedoms,political, are our very act, our can be political. so it's less aboutl as politicize sized. it's as being a kind of inclusive of a huge, a significant range of political thought, which is is, is, i think, both challenging but also made very. very doable by the breadth of our collection because if we go and collectt every presidential election and we joke that like our careers would be the only ones going like in 2020, before i had to pull them from the
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field because they were in the field when covid that it would be the reporters c-span smithsonian curators who would be at a sanders rally and a trump rally in the same day. so part of it is that the tion of the collection in that way and then part of it too is being very thoughtful and being unafr contextual, but also being v being kind of overtly positioned in a in a way that that will seem like an ov interpretation of the past or an overtly conservative. you know, there is a there's a there's always the risk from both sides that the political spectrum that one will see in the other your actions, your interpretations, your words on a label, your choice of an object your op ed, you know, your educational material as is leaning tooand one of, i think my
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challenge is to take the historians who continue to do really meaningful work. we're pushing the boundaries of both what the pastat our traditional notions, our l definitions of self and of gender and of body our own bodies. to then put that into a museum context in which this year over 3 million people will see in the building and 12 million people were access online. so it's a i think thathere are i think we handle that in answer to your question with that kind of thinking and thoughtfulness. but also compassion and and really i think leaning into the the wealth of scholarsan knowledge and not running away from it but also kind of keeping keeping in mind that our audience will need some
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not all summer, i'm sure. far smarter than i am, but they'll need us to be that bridge. bridge between cutting edge scholarship. what they think american history is or should be or has been, and then what they canesentation of of both fact andartifact. and to your point about technology, by using technology, especially visual technol, agi, to be able to condense like years of entertainment history years of, of political history through your media and right through the visual medium of film and course, digitized. so i love that. i love the question because it is a constant. if we don't if we fail to ask it, then we won't be doing our jobs. well. right. if we fail to realize that we're in this moment, which is dense and complicated and contested. and if people can see us as a a nonpartisan place to come in and to learn and maybe to sit
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next to someone who you've never met beforeoun object in a case or you're involved in a on site ed activity and think together about it because issues facing the nation or just get to h other and be in a that kind of a neutral, inviting civic space. speaking of civics, what should high school students know about our nation? much as they can. school which what should be should there be a national standard? well so the smithsonian educators around the count the department of education, all worked on a roadmap called educating for american democracy. as the pandemic hit. we had big and 2020 was not just it was going to be the year of the woman for suffrage. it was going to be the year when this brand new civics and history and social studies
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curricula was released. it was released, but, of course, the pandemic interrupted so much painfully of our lives. but it's still a remarkable resource that we're encouraging, along with the national council of social studies. i mean, all of the bigeducational groups in the nation are encouraging teachers, districts, states to both you know, learn about, but also employ. it was very carefully and thoughtfully done and it opens up venues. to your point about what should they come ofl learning that makes learning of civics, learning of history a learning of the pastd dynamic and relevant and, you know, a little bit less like your grandfather's civics in a way. but still very mindful of the facteducated populace is essential for a democracy's d so if they had emerged from high school with the tools of understanding of their own and their own power, right, what their vote willhey'll
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get to vote, most of them, if they're 18. right. for the first time when they and if they can feel like they arehat awesome. right to franchise and people fought so hard for for so many years. i think that would be a success. what's it called again? educating for americany. and is it available on your website? it is along with a whole host of other educational material and curricula at american history. that aside, that edu, you're an edu and not a gov or an edu. why is that? because the vast majority of our work as the scientists and as curators is considered to be scholarly. exhibit? what's the most popular exhibit at american history? right now? oh, it'swe opened about 18 months ago. wepened entertainment nation national spectator, which is the
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culmination of about ten, 15 years of work around our popular culture collections. so the intersection of music sports, broadway, filmtelevision. so when you walk in and you his trumpet, r2-d2 and c-3 frog. there's some stiff competition but what i love about that exhibit, and it probably is the most popular right now is its yes about popular culture from. about 1842 to the present, but it's more about how we've used entertainment, sports, music etc. popular forms as forums to come together about who we are, who we are as a nation. who's included? who's excluded? what d do we include? what do we exclude? and it i think it's rightfully one of the most popular, perennially, although the star-spangled banner, the presidentsirst ladies, the first lady's gowns and china and the most recently, of
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course, masks, because witden's inaugural outfits because there was no gown, she had a daytime ensemble and an evening ensemble. both of the designers, both women designers, created masks to go with it. so for the first time since edith taft's given to the smithsonian, we collected you have all the first lady's gowns? we do. since. since taft. but we do something from each first lady starting, of course, with martha washington. they're not all in display because we don't have the room, but they are in the collection. how many things are on display in the building on the mall in washington, and how many things are not on display? excellent question. and it's it's a slightly tricky general symptom rule is o objects we exhibit, roughly 3 to 4%. so what's essential about that is a radical digitization effort which for undertaking
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now we to get as many of those objects not all. and you wouldn't want all of them online, but you want a big bulk of them. so we're working to get at least about. 1000000 to 2000005 objects online and also to make sure that so those are the most accessible we can't get. those can go all around the world, but also to make sure that scholars and researchers know that what we have and and at we we have a number of traveling exhibitions right nry small they could go on a main street and some that need a you square foot space in a environmentally controlled way in which we make sure that our our work and our scholarship is disseminated as broadly as possible. anthea hartig do you think that 3 to 4% is the right amount to display, or would you like to see that ten 20, 30%? oh, yo know, that's a great question. i i do think that there's.
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it, but i think i'm an answer in two ways. but i just and i'll say both. i think thatometimes it's actually not the quantity, but the quality of the object that if there's if it is unique and there is one the top hat that president lincoln was wearing when he was assassinated, you don't need much. i mean, we have ans and some of them are on display with the top hat. but do you know is do you need that kind of much more than that to telegraph that story or in the case of objects that you can see? an amazing chronology and a change over here we have all the patent models from the patent office. those are astounding. and i would love to see more of those on display because you can kind of instantly see how inventors that were thinking about different elements of of technological need and prowess and inventiveness. so i think i would like to see more. i lo those. i'd like to unlock the
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collection mostly through our digital means, because what we found it doing. e's say we put and we work with communities and we crowdsource translation of our chinese currency and collection. what we learn by asking people like will you help us translate this part of our collection, which is an asnational name is native collection. is that then started? yes. volunteering their time to do that but to then asking for more like well what else do you have? you know, that could what else is in the collection that needs our help or once you unlock some of the digital facsimiles of those you want, well, what else do you have? an optical history, right? so do kind of people interested in the objects and in the archival material, bringing them and letting them deeper. and rese also then helps us decide how we privilege our own work, our own digital efforts
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our own exhibit efforts,. so how does your position at the smithsonian and president of h come together? how they come together? and so i'm the second person to be the president of o h who is not allied a generally a full professor at a university and the only other one was also a smithsonian employee. and i think it will i hope it has it aligned. well i hope that both the sm well. my my being nominated. you're nominated as vice president, president ele. president, you. it's an ascension was approved by the secretary. there has to be any of our service as especially as museum directors. really anyone. the smithsonian service to another nonprofit is is care reviewed for kind of kinship. it make sense for me to do this in my official capacity?
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and so t was approved. and it's been a remarkable couple of years. and i think that i hope that my staff and my colleagues and my board and the proud of that. of joint service. it shows to, i think, that the smithsonian and many of our my fellow directors are very nonprofits, whether it be in the sciences or the arts and i think it adds so much right to the richness of both our scholarly capacities, but then really our work on behalf of the american people. anthea hartig is president of the organization of american historians. she'sthe smithsonian's national museum of tory, the first woman to be so and the first woman to do so since 2019. we appreciate your spending a little time with us. thank
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