Showing posts with label primary sources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label primary sources. Show all posts

Music and the Undergraduate Classroom

By: Emily Clark and Lauren Turek

In the middle of January, the wonderful Rachel Lindsey asked her Facebook community for their recommendations on songs for a playlist for her American Christianity course. This got Lauren and I (Emily) messaging each other about how we use music in our classrooms. Because we both believe in thoughtful teaching and collaborative work, we're posting together about the pedagogical value of music in the undergraduate classroom.

Emily: I use music everyday in my undergraduate classes. I get to my classroom early and as students come in, I have a song playing (with song title and artist posted on the screen) that intersects with the day's topic. (Full disclosure: I stole this idea from Chip Callahan.) The song plays as they come into the room and get settled into their desks. Some students chat while the song plays, others sit and listen. I think of it as the class mood music that sets the tone for the day. And, as some of my students have remarked on, the music gets at the topic in another way. As I wrote on the blog in a post on teaching with primary sources, "There's so much about The O'Jays' "Ship Ahoy" that sets the right atmosphere for a discussion of religion and the Atlantic slave trade. And Depeche Mode's "Personal Jesus" is just a fun way to begin a class on the Second Great Awakening." My favorite element about starting off with the mood music is that it sets apart the classroom as a different space. My classes are typically in the very busy main building on my institution's campus. The hallways are packed with students moving from one room to another or waiting for a class that's going over late to release. Playing music highlights the boundary between the hallway (a liminal space) and the classroom (another liminal space, but a very different one).

Lauren: In an effort to give my students a sense of the past, I also incorporate music into my classes, particularly in my modern U.S. history survey. Much like Emily, a few minutes before class begins, I start playing a song that in some way evokes the period or theme of the class (an idea that I poached from Bart Elmore). I then use the song lyrics to frame my brief introduction to the class topic of the day. For example, I play a recording of “The Old Chisholm Trail” to discuss enduring myths about the American West before my lecture on transcontinental expansion, the Indian Wars, and the Ghost Dance. Where the song relates humorous tales of rugged, lone cowboys conquering a wild, empty frontier, in class we talk about the significant role that federal policy played in transcontinental expansion as well as about the various strategies—including spiritual and religious strategies—that native Americans used to resist or cope with the change that expansion wrought. Religious themes also come out frequently in the music I play when covering the Cold War; there is lots of apocalyptic language in songs about atomic weaponry! I also like to bring in sheet music wherever possible. Being able to see the colorful cover art, the lyrics, and the notation as a song plays adds further context. Comparing the sheet music for World War I-era songs such as “I Didn’t Raise My Boy to Be a Soldier” to “What Kind of an American are you?” help students understand shifts in public opinion or understandings of international affairs, for example.

Emily: In James Lang's 2016 book Small Teaching: Everyday Lessons from the Science of Learning he describes the small changes we can make to our courses that can enhance student learning and make big differences. He defines small teaching is “an approach that seeks to spark positive change in higher education through small but powerful modifications to our course design and teaching practices” (5). When it comes to pedagogy, small things can be big things. In addition to marking the space of the classroom and encouraging reflection on the day's topic in a new way, playing music in the few minutes before class serves an additional and very practical pedagogical function. (I hope) It lessens student anxiety. Some students are outgoing, some aren't. Some students come into a class with friends, others come into the room knowing no one. It can be uncomfortable or overwhelming to sit quietly while feeling like you're surrounded by people who all know each other. My hope is that the music cuts across that. No one is just sitting in silence. One of our Deans of Student Life recently informed us that mental health issues are expected to soon eclipse all other student life concerns (including drinking and Title IX). If I can help students feel more comfortable in my classroom, then hopefully I can also help them feel more confident there too.

Lauren: In addition to the goals that Emily highlights, which I share, I also have specific pedagogical goals. Playing music (and even looking at sheet music) helps students connect with the people of the past in a different way. The students can connect with the music on an emotional level. Reminding them that many of the songs I play would have been part of the soundtrack of life for some of the very people we are talking about in class connects them with the past in a different way. Knowing that Americans in the past would have gathered around the piano to play the sheet music we’re studying in class, or might have heard the song I started the morning with on the radio or their Victrola is powerful. Making these connections and realizing that the people we read about in our books and primary sources were real people helps my students develop historical empathy. At the same time, the differences that students can identify in the sounds, daily activities, viewpoints, and language that comes through in the music also reminds them of the gulf that separates past and present. It also helps everyone settle in to my classes, which are in the mornings, and get ready to tackle the topics of the day.

Some Playlist Favorites from Emily and Lauren:

Emily: A class on Catholic immigration starts with "Rebels of the Sacred Heart," by Flogging Molly. A class on Father Divine kicks off with "Accentuate the Positive," performed by Bing Crosby and The Andrew Sisters. A class on Native American religions and colonialism starts with "My Land" by Litefoot. Any class discussing the civil rights movement can open with "Mississippi Goddam" by Nina Simone. A class on modern indigenous spiritualities starts with "Electric Pow Wow" by A Tribe Called Red. For a class on black Judaism in the Great Migration, "Burn Devil Burn" by the Soul Messengers gets the class in a good groove. A class meeting on European colonialism can open with "Great Nations of Europe" by Randy Newman. And if you're talking black power and religion, "Fight the Power" by Public Enemy is the only way to go.

Lauren: There are several songs that I play in my modern U.S. history survey that have a relation to American religion. Some, such as the Merry Macs song “Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition,” recorded at the height of World War II, Jackie Doll and his Pickled Peppers, “When They Drop the Atomic Bomb,” and The Buchanan Brothers “Atomic Power” speak to Christian nationalism in one way or another. There are many gospel songs and spirituals to play when discussing the civil rights movement; while I always play some of the songs that activists sang while marching I am also very partial to Sam Cooke’s “A Change is Gonna Come,” though it makes only a passing spiritual reference. I do play several Sister Rosetta Tharpe songs during the semester, many of which have gospel roots, and enjoy playing her classic “That’s All,” which touches on sin and religion, in the last class of the semester. I also wholeheartedly agree with Emily’s suggestion of playing “Fight the Power” when covering black power and religion.  

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Introducing the Second Edition of "American Catholic History: A Documentary Reader"

Today's guest post comes from Catherine R. Osborne (a former postdoctoral fellow at the Cushwa Center).  Catherine is now Visiting Assistant Professor in the Department of Theological Studies at Loyola Marymount University.  She is also the co-editor of the forthcoming second edition of American Catholic History: A Documentary Reader (NYU, 2017), the subject of today's post.  Thanks, Catherine!




Over a decade ago, I was working at the Francis and Ann Curran Center for American Catholic Studies at Fordham University (https://www.fordham.edu/cs/) when its then co-director, Mark Massa, SJ, asked me if I wanted to participate in his newest project: assembling a one-volume primary source reader for students taking courses in American Catholicism. Drawing on our own research and on the work of earlier anthologists, especially John Tracy Ellis's Documents of American Catholic History and the fabulous nine-volume Orbis series American Catholic Identities: A Documentary History (general editor, Christopher J. Kauffman), we selected, organized, and wrote introductions for 70 documents.

American Catholic History: A Documentary Reader (NYU Press) was released in 2008, and has been adopted in a variety of undergraduate courses since then. Several years ago, this time working at the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism at the University of Notre Dame, I wondered if it was time to think about reprinting. I contacted our editor to ask if it might be possible to add one or two documents whose omission had bothered me for years.

Out of that conversation developed, not a slightly modified reprint, but a totally new edition of the reader, which will be released November 14. The second edition has 88 documents, of which 34 are new; several have never been published before in any form. (https://nyupress.org/books/9781479874682/)

I want to reflect a little in the rest of this post on three elements that reshaped the new edition.




Experience

One of the most helpful things we did was to survey people who had used the first edition in their classrooms. This happened both informally, as we consulted our networks, and in the form of five anonymous readers' reviews from NYU Press. We asked both what documents could be cut from the first edition, and what would be best to add.

The second edition is a better book because of the feedback we were able to get from users. It became clear that most people were using the book to teach cultural history, not intellectual history; "American Catholic History" was also a much more popular title than "American Catholic Studies." It was therefore possible to cut back on the documents in the intellectual-history section of the first edition. On the other hand, many people asked for more material to help them teach immigration and anti-Catholicism in the 19th century. As a result, the reader now includes Lyman Beecher's "A Plea for the West," the Know-Nothing Oath, four of Thomas Nast's anti-Catholic cartoons, and (to help make the point that a lot of immigrants were not interested in assimilation!) the St. Raphael Societies' Memorial.

Diversity and Challenge

In the first edition, we tried to include documents from diverse points of view on a number of axes (clergy and laity; men and women; various national immigrant groups) and to provide documents that would give contrasting viewpoints on contentious issues: the schools, race, sexuality broadly writ, worship style. But on balance, reviewing the first edition, we felt it had not gone far enough, and our outside reviewers agreed. As a result, most of the documents that had to be cut because of space issues were clerical, "official," voices. I particularly wanted to include more women and more attention to Native American and African American experiences. Luckily, it was possible to draw not only on documents I had been aware of earlier--I especially wanted to include the 1968 "Statement of the Black Catholic Clergy Caucus"--but on a decade of intervening research. Mary Ewens' research on the Alaskan native order the Sisters of the Snow provided one document; Emily Clark's translation of documents from the Ursulines of New Orleans provided two more. The archivists for the Sinsinawa Dominicans have been looking into the history of the "American Citizenship Curriculum" for Catholic schoolchildren, and a selection from that now fills out the question of how Catholics were taught to be "American Citizens." The relatively new presence of internet archives helped enormously: the Georgetown Slavery Project provided a new document. Other documents came in a more old-fashioned way; having decided to add a document from the ACT UP protest against St. Patrick's Cathedral, I found the full text in a massive, doorstopping primary source reader on LGBT history.

I could go on, but I'll just add two stories. Sometimes you really hit the jackpot: Timothy Matovina directed me towards one of my favorite new documents, a sermon delivered in 2005. Given by a laywoman (one point in its favor!) it addressed devotion to Our Lady of Guadalupe (tragically missing from the first edition) in the context of immigration (helping to fill out both the continuing history of Catholic immigration and the way in which devotion helps immigrants manage their new lives.)

Other times, it's a struggle. One of the fastest-growing Catholic populations since the immigration reforms of the 60s has been Asian-American, especially Vietnamese and Filipino/a. We were unable to find a suitable document for the first edition and it was something I especially wanted to address in the second edition. Yet it was challenging to find the kind of document I wanted, despite getting in touch with several other scholars; what I could find in print, in English, was largely limited to more "official" points of view and gave little sense of the distinctiveness of these communities. I ended up with a news story on a Vietnamese parish that included an interview with a co-founder. But I am also now in touch with several scholars of (secular) Vietnamese-American history who have promised to keep an eye out for primary sources on Catholicism that they might be able to translate. Third edition?

Up to Date

The first edition's last document, chronologically, dated to 1988. We were reluctant to go too far into the present on the grounds that most people would want to use their own selection of recent documents to make whatever points they needed to make. In 2008, 1988 was a reasonable place to stop. In 2017, it clearly wasn't! So, we needed to make some decisions about what more recent developments seemed likely to still be salient in the future. Kate Dugan made a successful pitch for John Paul II's Denver World Youth Day speech (1993), where he discussed the culture of life and inspired a generation of "JPII Catholics." A few other more recent documents found their way into different sections. But we also chose to add a five-document section called "New Horizons," dealing with issues we felt would continue to be important. In order, these were the sexual abuse crisis; parish closings (on the one hand) and growth (on the other); and questions of gender and authority as exemplified in the Leadership Conference of Women Religious investigation. Finally, we concluded with Pope Francis's address to Congress in 2015, on the theory that it would allow courses to end with a reconsideration of what is interesting about American Catholicism.

To close this blog post on a personal note, this is the choice I wonder the most about right now. Shortly after the text of the book was finalized, Donald Trump was elected president, and an entire set of narratives of American history were, once again, profoundly disrupted. (Along with everything else being profoundly disrupted.) Francis's address was not entirely hopeful, but it did suggest a path forward to hemispheric unity and service which does not seem, as of October 2017, to be the way that we're heading. I have been using samples from the new reader with my own American Catholic History class this fall, and I am still not sure what document is going to close out the class in December.

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Digitized Native American Reservation Photographs

Cara Burnidge

"Indian woman and young girls in front of tents," Dept. of
Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Standing Rock Agency,
September 17, 1947 [285835]
Today, the National Archives's "Spotlight on the Records" highlighted digitized records that may be of interest to readers: Native American Reservation Photographs. 

Most of the photographs are found in Record Group 75: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1793-1999, but other federal agencies also took part in documenting life on reservations. Daily life is often the focus of the photographs, but this can range from farming and families to sports to protests. The picture included here is one of over 5,000 digitized photographs of Standing Rock Sioux Tribe in North Dakota. For those interested in connecting the past to the present or including Native Americans as a part of American history well beyond the colonial era,  these photographs are an excellent resource to share with students. 

In addition to the photos of Standing Rock, there are also collections of Spirit Lake Sioux at Fort Trotten (North Dakota), Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate on the Lake Travers Reservation (South Dakota), Oglala Sioux on Pine Ridge Reservation (South Dakota), Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapahoe at Wind River Agency (Wyoming), and areas near Fort Berthold Indian Reservation (North Dakota) affected by flooding during the construction of Garrison Dam.


Deep dives into these archives can be a helpful exercise with students, as Emily Clark has noted in "Taking Class to the Archives." These digitized photographs might be one way to bring the archives to your students. In Emily's class, the archives became an opportunity to do the the work of a historian narrating the past. These photographs certainly can provide a similar opportunity. Another possibility, and one encouraged by NARA, is for students to become Citizen Archivists, tagging digitized photos to identify and describe the subject, objects, and themes. Spending some time in class tagging photos together is another way to have the kind of "Adventures in Materiality" that Sarah Dees had in her Museums course. By tagging together, a class might be able to practice seeing and analyzing the materiality, embodiment, and production of culture in the past but also in the present through the work (or outsourced work) of the National Archives.*

*H/T Adam Park who suggested David Morgan's "Religion and Embodiment in the Study of Material Culture," in ORE Religion in America, 10.1093/acrefore/9780199340378.013.32 

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Primary Source: Eisenhower on D-Day

Jonathan Den Hartog

As my June entries have traditionally fallen on the anniversary of D-Day, I've enjoyed using the entry to highlight topics around religion in World War II. For previous entries, see here and here. 

Via the National World War II Museum


Today, briefly and with minimal analysis, let me share Gen. Dwight Eisenhower's Orders of the Day for D-Day:

Soldiers, Sailors and Airmen of the Allied Expeditionary Force!

You are about to embark upon the Great Crusade, toward which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you. The hopes and prayers of liberty-loving people everywhere march with you. In company with our brave Allies and brothers-in-arms on other Fronts, you will bring about the destruction of the German war machine, the elimination of Nazi tyranny over the oppressed peoples of Europe, and security for ourselves in a free world.

Your task will not be an easy one. Your enemy is well trained, well equipped and battle hardened. He will fight savagely.

But this is the year 1944 ! Much has happened since the Nazi triumphs of 1940-41. The United Nations have inflicted upon the Germans great defeats, in open battle, man-to-man. Our air offensive has seriously reduced their strength in the air and their capacity to wage war on the ground.

Our Home Fronts have given us an superiority in weapons and munitions of war, and placed at our disposal great reserves of trained fighting men. The tide has turned! The free men of the world marching together to Victory!

I have full confidence in your devotion to duty and skill in battle.
We will accept nothing less than full Victory!

Good Luck! And let us all beseech the blessing of Almighty God upon this great and noble undertaking.
Dwight D. Eisenhower

I would observe that not only does Eisenhower conclude by beseeching "the blessing of Almighty God upon this great and noble undertaking," but he had earlier assured the soldiers that the "hopes and prayers of liberty-loving people everywhere march with you." Eisenhower posed the D-Day invasion as a "Crusade" that properly had the support of American and international prayers. All participants could enter the fray with a sense of a just cause for the violence that was awaiting them. A one-page order thus points to many questions about faith, war, violence, and nationalism.
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Taking Classes to the Archives


Emily Suzanne Clark

Readers of the blog might remember that I like to post about teaching. A big part of my teaching is primary sources and that increasingly includes archives. I first blogged about taking a class into the Jesuit archives back in November 2015, shortly after having my American Christianities class work in the archives. That was my first time taking my class on an archival field trip, and since then I've taken four more classes back. I'm hooked, and it seems they are too. Many have told me that they hope the assignment remains on the syllabus for future classes.

Two students digitizing photos,
from spring 2016 Native American Religions.
Back when I took my first class into the archives, I blogged and raved about Anthony Grafton and James Grossman's piece in The American Scholar about how student experiences in archives help them develop "habits of mind" and begin to form their scholarly selves. Now, when I take my class into the archives we're not doing full-blown research projects, but we might be getting there. Since that initial foray into archives and pedagogy, I've taken my spring 2016 Native American Religions class into the Jesuit archives, along with a first-year seminar called Race in America (fall 2016 and spring 2017), and my American Christianities class again (spring 2017). With the exception of Native American Religions each class spent one week on an archival project; Native American Religions spent about four weeks. Each class I've learned more about how to effectively teach with archives, and each time, I have loved it.

Short digitizing break to smile for the camera!
(That class was the only one I photographed.)
I won't summarize the American Christianities archive experience, as that was recounted last time. This semester we did more or less the same project. The Native American Religions class project had a digital humanities component and really needs a stand-alone post. The project had its successes and its not-so-successes and I'm stoked to try it again with two sections this fall! (If you're really curious, click here.) Instead I'd like to focus here on my Race in America first-year seminar class. They looked at 5 boxes from the "Radicals Collection," an unprocessed hodgepodge. A while back there was a Jesuit who was fascinated by radical groups in the region and begin to collect newspaper clippings, pamphlets, photographs, etc. on various radical groups. There are four boxes of material on the Ku Klux Klan and one on various white supremacy groups in Idaho and the rest of the region (Neo-Nazis, skinheads, Aryan Nations, and more). In groups of four, they each took one of those boxes. Being an unprocessed collection meant there was no archival guide and no clear organization for the material. I encouraged the class to enjoy that aspect. They had recently finished Paul Harvey's Bounds of Their Habitation: Race and Religion in American History and I reminded them that he had to sift through tons of material to tell that story. Their task was similar: figure out the story of their box. Each group turned in a 3-4 page reflection on the experience that focused on four main questions: What kind of materials did you look at? What did those materials have to say? What do they tell us as scholars? How do they fit in their historical and cultural contexts? They were fascinated by the KKK's local popularity, as the Jesuit amassed a lot of material about the Klan in Portland, Seattle, Spokane, and the rest of the Pacific Northwest. The Klan-produced material helped them see how the organization marketed and presented itself, and the newspaper coverage highlighted both acceptance of the Klan and pushback. The newspaper clippings on the strong presence of the Aryan Nations in the late 20th century (1970s and 1980s) reminded them that though the KKK is not widespread in the region anymore, the power of white supremacy is certainly still around. (To prepare them for this project, we read Kelly J. Baker's "Robes, Fiery Crosses, and the American Flag: The Materiality of the 1920s' Klan's Patriotism, and Intolerance" from Material Religion.)

As a fun bonus for those still reading, here's my take on best practices with archival projects (which might one day be its own blog post). Others might have a different take, and each project is going to be a little different.
1. Allow time and room for play. I sometimes feel like class time can be rigid, which is not a bad thing on its own but it can get monotonous. Spending time with archives switches things up and gets students out of their desks and into a new space. Those two things alone set a different tone and atmosphere that encourages creativity and curiosity. Archives, then, become a great place to explore.
Two students and the wonderful archivist digitizing photos,
from spring 2016 Native American Religions.
2. Select manageable amounts of material. Too much material can overwhelm students who are not used to archives and lead to exclamations of, "we can't read all this!" I remind them often that reading everything is not their task, but rather to begin crafting a story based on the material in front of them. I also don't like giving them too few documents, but rather the right amount to keep them busy and interested. In other words, I try to leave them with even more questions.
3. I'm a fan of group work for archive projects. They can divide and conquer more material, they work through difficult/challenging/strange documents together, and they explain the material to each other. If you do group projects though, I recommend having each student fill out a short peer team assessment form that has them evaluate how they and the rest of the group cooperated together. It typically helps ensure a healthy group dynamic and it encourages them to be thoughtful about how they work with their peers—something they'll need to know, regardless of their chosen careers. (Confession: I stole my peer team assessment form from the fantastic Katie Faull.)
 4. Befriend your library and special collections staff! Not only are they wonderful people, but also they are the best wellsprings of knowledge about the material. And, chances are, they enjoy working with undergraduate students! With an archival project, collaboration is your friend.
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