Description

Book Synopsis
How have university scholars across a variety of disciplines navigated the co-creative and collaborative relationships involving community partners? How has the addition of digital components changed the way information can be communicated to the intended audience? Through digital projects, traditional academic silos have given way to community-based partnerships which open research, storytelling, and curation to wide array of contributors from civic engagement professionals, librarians, archivists, technology personnel, local citizens, and academics. The collaborative process may push your comfort zone and make you grapple with your roll of storytelling but as the authors of the last chapter say, “You can’t make ketchup without smashing a few tomatoes.”

Digital projects can empower communities through collaboration and create new primary sources, collapse barriers, and spark new dialogue. Digital Community Engagement “lifts the hood” and presents nine examples of digital collaborations from constructing a public response to police violence, to creating digital stories of homelessness, to young activists united around local people in the Deep South to build a grassroots movement for social change.

Wingo, Heppler and Schadewald bring together cutting-edge campus-community partnerships with a focus on digital projects. The case studies, authored by academics and their community partners, explore models for digital community engagement that leverage new media through reciprocal partnerships. The contributions to this volume stand at the crossroads of digital humanities, public history, and community

Trade Review
“This book offers a powerful intervention in public humanities and public histories, contextualizing and offering case studies on a series of projects that fit under the rubric of what the editors call “DiCE” or “Digital Community Engagement. * Roopika Risam, Salem State University *
“[The editors bring together] a diverse set of community-focused, digital public history projects that nonetheless cohere into a unified work. The case studies are immediately relevant to the concerns of community organizers, activists, and practitioners working today." * Alexandra Werner-Winslow, Appalshop *

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

Letter to Future Community Partners

Introduction

1.  Learn from the Past, Organize for the Future: Building the SNCC Digital Gateway

2.  Archival Resistance to Structural Racism: A People’s Archive of Police Violence in Cleveland

3.  Harvesting History, Remembering Rondo

4.  “Send Out a Little Light”: The Antioch A.M.E. Digital Archive

5.  Seen and Heard: Using DiCE to Reconnect Communities and Enrich History Pedagogy

6.  Everyday Life in Middletown: The Archive as Community

7.  Mobilizing Digital Stories: Collaborating to Educate and Engage a Local Public in Realities of Homelessness

8.  Hear, Here: Digital History and Community Engagement Activating Social Change

9.  You Can’t Make Ketchup Without Smashing a Few Tomatoes: Reflections on a University-Community Partnership

DiCE Biographies

Index

Digital Community Engagement – Partnering

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£32.63

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Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Sat 31 Jan 2026.

A Paperback / softback by Rebecca Wingo, Jason Heppler, Paul Schadewald

10 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Digital Community Engagement – Partnering by Rebecca Wingo

    Publisher: University of Cincinnati Press
    Publication Date: 01/09/2020
    ISBN13: 9781947602519, 978-1947602519
    ISBN10: 1947602519

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    How have university scholars across a variety of disciplines navigated the co-creative and collaborative relationships involving community partners? How has the addition of digital components changed the way information can be communicated to the intended audience? Through digital projects, traditional academic silos have given way to community-based partnerships which open research, storytelling, and curation to wide array of contributors from civic engagement professionals, librarians, archivists, technology personnel, local citizens, and academics. The collaborative process may push your comfort zone and make you grapple with your roll of storytelling but as the authors of the last chapter say, “You can’t make ketchup without smashing a few tomatoes.”

    Digital projects can empower communities through collaboration and create new primary sources, collapse barriers, and spark new dialogue. Digital Community Engagement “lifts the hood” and presents nine examples of digital collaborations from constructing a public response to police violence, to creating digital stories of homelessness, to young activists united around local people in the Deep South to build a grassroots movement for social change.

    Wingo, Heppler and Schadewald bring together cutting-edge campus-community partnerships with a focus on digital projects. The case studies, authored by academics and their community partners, explore models for digital community engagement that leverage new media through reciprocal partnerships. The contributions to this volume stand at the crossroads of digital humanities, public history, and community

    Trade Review
    “This book offers a powerful intervention in public humanities and public histories, contextualizing and offering case studies on a series of projects that fit under the rubric of what the editors call “DiCE” or “Digital Community Engagement. * Roopika Risam, Salem State University *
    “[The editors bring together] a diverse set of community-focused, digital public history projects that nonetheless cohere into a unified work. The case studies are immediately relevant to the concerns of community organizers, activists, and practitioners working today." * Alexandra Werner-Winslow, Appalshop *

    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgements

    Letter to Future Community Partners

    Introduction

    1.  Learn from the Past, Organize for the Future: Building the SNCC Digital Gateway

    2.  Archival Resistance to Structural Racism: A People’s Archive of Police Violence in Cleveland

    3.  Harvesting History, Remembering Rondo

    4.  “Send Out a Little Light”: The Antioch A.M.E. Digital Archive

    5.  Seen and Heard: Using DiCE to Reconnect Communities and Enrich History Pedagogy

    6.  Everyday Life in Middletown: The Archive as Community

    7.  Mobilizing Digital Stories: Collaborating to Educate and Engage a Local Public in Realities of Homelessness

    8.  Hear, Here: Digital History and Community Engagement Activating Social Change

    9.  You Can’t Make Ketchup Without Smashing a Few Tomatoes: Reflections on a University-Community Partnership

    DiCE Biographies

    Index

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