Your final task in this 395 research seminar is to develop an interpretive digital history project based on original research. Your final digital project must develop a convincing and compelling interpretation grounded in, but not necessarily exclusively focused on, materials in the Digital Berkeley Folk Music Festival Archive using the digitized materials in Omeka. You may add additional materials to this source of material as well.
A successful project will address specific arguments in the existing historiography of the American folk music revival and related topics based on the secondary materials we have explored or additional relevant scholarship. It will do so by demonstrating how new primary evidence relates to this extant literature. The project will also explore inventive and creative uses of digital technologies, tools, designs, and capabilities with the WordPress content management system (cms) to further the interpretive stakes of the project. In other words, your job is not to simply past a paper online, but to investigate how to use the WordPress environment and the digital in general to create a new kind of publication based on original historical research.
Projects will be evaluated by its ability to (1) perceive new aspects of the source material in relation to an existing historiography (secondary literature; existing interpretations); (2) compellingly frame your research question and your thesis (you might quite literally create posts, pages, and/or widgets that articulate your research question, the existing interpretations, the materials and methods you plan to use, and your thesis/argument; (3) compellingly express the arguments of other interpreters; (4) narrative your interpretation by using the digital to wield historical evidence effectively in service of an argument about your topic and theme; and (5) track your research progress effectively in some section of your final project.
The final project should pair one person from column A with one theme from column B. If you have a different idea for the final project, speak with instructor to develop a revised version of assignment.
A
Joan Baez
Doc Watson
Sam Hinton
Charles Seeger
Almeda Riddle
Archie Green
Alice Stuart
New Lost City Ramblers
Mike Seeger
John Cohen
Tracy Schwarz
Bess Lomax Hawes
Barry Olivier
Alan Lomax
Schlomo Carlebach
Jesse Fuller
Congress of Wonders
Song of Earth Chorale
Sandy and Jeanie Darlington
The Gand Family Singers
Steve Mann and Will Scarlette
Karen Williams
Diesel Ducks
Clarence Van Hook
Sawtooth Mountain Volunteers
Dr. Humbead’s New Tranquility String Band
Dave Frederickson
Allan MacLeod
Maybe Smith
Larry Diggs
David and Tina Meltzer
Vera Johnson
Paul Arnoldi
The Floating Lotus Magic Opera Company
Howlin’ Wolf
John Fahey
The Andrews Sisters of Berkeley
Crome Syrcus
The Morning
Huge Roach
Quicksilver Messenger Service
It’s a Beautiful Day
ED Denson
Daniel Moore
Richard Rollins
Ed Kahn
Mitch Greenhill
Theodore Bikel
Paul Hansen
Merritt Herring
Kathy and Carol
Pat Kilroy
Chris Strachwitz
Mark Spoelstra
DK Wilgus
Herb Pederson
Ralph Rinzler
Janet Smith
Carl T. “Doc” Sprague
B
Shifting definition of folk music
Genre
Free Speech Movement
Politics of 1968
Counterculture
Academic folklore
Commerce
Politics
Gender
Race
Class
Region
Age/Generation
Public space
Personal expression
Sound and history
Theories of culture
Imitation/Appropriation/Inspiration
Instrumentation (Significance of electric, acoustic, etc.)
Politics of dancing
Listening and sonic history
Sensory history
Urban
Rural
West coast
Cold War
Vietnam War
Labor movement
Radicalism
Conservatism
Romanticism
Authenticity
Community/Commons/Group/Social Belonging
Individuality
Freedom
Obligation
Responsibility
Americanness
Global culture
Concepts of the “vernacular”
Rubric:
1. Interpretation 25%
· What is the interpretation?
· Is the interpretation clearly, precisely, and evocatively conveyed?
2. Use of evidence 25%
· Is the evidence from the Digital Berkeley Folk Music Festival Archive linked to the interpretation effectively and precisely?
· Does the project deepen a reader’s understanding of the evidence from the archive?
· Does the project effectively draw upon additional primary sources?
3. Use of secondary material 25%
· Does the project effectively and compellingly link its interpretation and evidence to secondary materials?
· Does it explain existing interpretations cogently?
· Does it demonstrate clearly what is important about its intervention in the existing questions, debates, and dilemmas of scholarly understanding?
4. Use of the digital 25%
· Does the project make innovative use of digital tools, capacities, technologies, and design to communicate its interpretation?
· Does it do so conceptually?
· Was the project able to implement this technology effectively?
NOTE: Citations and Bibliographic Requirements:
Your digital project should include an integration or section that lists credits and citations. These should include secondary sources (authors, titles, publications, dates) and any photographic credits you can locate. You may use Chicago Manual of Style as a rough guide for citation formats, but use common sense as well. Your task is to give your reader access to the sources you made use of in a clear and concise way and to credit ideas and materials you draw upon.
Examples of final projects: