Pamela Newkirk is an award-winning journalist, a professor of
journalism, and a director of undergraduate studies at New York University. She
is the author of Within the
Veil: Black Journalists, White Media, which won the National Press Club
Award for Media Criticism, and the editor of Letters
from Black America. She lives in New York City.
1. How
and/or when did you get you hooked on history?
My dad was an antiques dealer and collected black
memorabilia -- vintage posters, photographs, rare books, postcards and letters
-- that had been tucked in bureaus and trunks acquired in estate sales. The
ephemera of early black life was all around me and I became fascinated by the
lost history -- by the many influential people and movements that were not
included in history books. When I discovered the Schomburg Center for Research
in Black Culture, which was founded by someone like my father who valued the
ephemera of black life, I thought I had died and gone to heaven.
2. What
role does history play or has it played in your personal life?
It has played a very meaningful role in my life and has
taught me the value of cherishing family history which feeds into our
collective history. Unfortunately much of the history of African Americans and
other marginalized people is left out of the historical narrative. For so long
their artifacts were not valued by major institutions and, as a result,
they became devalued by African Americans themselves.
3. How
is/How was history a part of your professional life/career?
While SPECTACLE is solely a historical work, all of my
previous books have a historical dimension. My first book, Within the Veil: Black Journals,
White Media explores the
efforts by African American journalists to work in mainstream newsrooms,
beginning during the Civil War. .However most of the book addresses
contemporary issues. That was followed by two epistolary collections. The last, Letters from Black America,
includes 250 letters penned by African Americans from the 1700s to 2008. The
correspondents include slaves, surgeons, soldiers, parents, politicians and is
a multidimensional portrait of black life in letters.
4. Why is studying/knowing
history important?
Because it enables us to recognize progress or regression.
Hopefully we won't continue to make the same mistakes. It is the
foundation that generation after generation builds on.
5. What
is your favorite period or aspect of history to learn about and why?
The early twentieth century was fascinating. Cities like
New York were becoming beacons of art, culture, architecture and attracting
tens of thousands of immigrants from around the world, bringing with them
their languages, customs, and culture, Also new disciplines, like anthropology,
were being created. A truly fascinating period and historians have only
scratched the surface. There's so much more to unearth.
6. Tell
us about your book Spectacle: The Astonishing Life of Ota Benga?
SPECTACLE is the story of a young Congolese man who in 1906
made national and global headlines after he was exhibited in the Bronx Zoo
Monkey House, at times with an orangutan. He had been captured in the Congo and
was held in the zoo against his will. This episode illuminates racial attitudes
at the dawn of the twentieth century in one of the world's most progressive
cities. It also shows how deeply pernicious attitudes about Africans were
embedded in science, in media and in popular culture. Also, a century later,
the entire episode had been sanitized and the man who most exploited Ota Benga
was depicted in accounts as his friend and savior.
7. It
is a story that few people are aware of. Why is it important today?
This episode reveals the progress we've made in a century,
but also exposes the roots of outlandish beliefs that had been grounded in
science, and that linger still. Ota Benga's exhibition was not the
creation of one bad egg. There was a wide web of complicity among some of the
city's most eminent men and institutions, including The New York Times, the
mayor, leading scientists, along with tens of thousands of New Yorkers. Nearly
a quarter-million people flocked to the zoo to see a diminutive caged African
in the monkey house.
Also, it was important to correct the historical
record.
Wednesday, August 19, 2015
Sunday, August 2, 2015
7 Questions With Liz Covart, History Communicator
Liz Covart is a blogger, podcaster, author, and historian specializing in early American and colonial history. Her podcast is called “Ben Franklin’s World.” www.elizabethcovart.com; www.benfranklinsworld.com
1. How and/or
when did you get you hooked on history?
I became "hooked" on history by
being surrounded by it. As a child, my parents always took my brother and I to
museums and historic sites. Growing up in New England we had a lot of choices,
but my parents didn't limit us to our home region. Rather than spend our
vacations on the beach, my parents planned trips around museums and historic
sites. We would fly into a major U.S. city, rent a car, and drive from museum
to national park to historic site for a week or more before we flew home.
2. What role
does history play or has it played in your personal life?
As a professional
historian I get to research, think, write about, and convey history each and
every day. The study of history is part of who I am and how I look at the
world.
On a side note, even
though I have grown, married, and moved out of my parents' house, I still look
at vacations as opportunities to explore history. Last year, I took my partner
Tim on a "French and Indian War Tour," a 7-day cruise from Boston
around the Canadian maritime provinces and down the St. Lawrence River. We
stopped at Grand Pré, a former Acadian settlement; Fortress Louisbourg, the
gateway to New France; the Plains of Abraham, site of the battle that led
France to surrender New France to Great Britain; And, the site of the Charlottetown
Conference, which led to Canadian confederation.
3. How is history a part of your professional life and career? Why is studying/knowing history important?
History is my professional career. I love searching
for answers to my questions about the past in the archives. I also love to
share my passion for history with others. I became a "history
communicator" instead of a college or university professor because I want
to convey history to as large an audience as possible. I believe that
understanding history can help us affect a better future. We like to think that
we are new and novel because we live in the 21st century, but in reality,
nearly all world problems are variations on past problems. A good understanding
of history provides us with the inspiration we need to innovate solutions for
the challenges we face today. History can tell us what ideas fixed past
problems, which ideas did not, and why ideas met success or failure.
Additionally, history tells us who we are and how we came to be who we are.
4. What is
your favorite period or aspect of history to learn about and why?
My favorite period is
the American Revolution. I love to research, write, and talk about what
happened in North America between 1750 and about 1815.
5. How did
you get into making podcasts?
I listened to podcasts
long before I decided to make a podcast. Ben Franklin's World: A
Podcast About Early American History began because I wanted to discuss
and explore early American history with people who love it. I also believe that
my fellow historians need to interact with non-historians more because very few
people outside of the historical profession know about their interesting and
important work. Podcasting has allowed me to bring their important work to a
history-loving public who cares about the past and wants to know more about it.
6. What would
listeners hear in your podcasts? What sets them apart from other
podcasts?
Ben Franklin's World
is different from other podcasts in that it offers accessible conversations
with professional historians. Listeners get to meet an historian, learn more
about their research, and explore the early American past from many different
vantage points.