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A Taste of Memory

July 13, 2021 Incite Institute at Columbia University
Two kids with their grandmother sitting next to the table, full of traditional Chinese New Year snacks.

Two kids with their grandmother sitting next to the table, full of traditional Chinese New Year snacks.

Why are food memories so powerful? What exactly does it mean when people talk about food? Resonating with the recent OHMA workshop with Storm Garner for her Queens Night Market Vendor Stories and Oral History Project, OHMA student Nina Zhou shares an example of how food memories are curated on documentary media.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags family, food, Memory
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Mercy, and the Eternal Lightness of Weighted-Being

May 12, 2021 Incite Institute at Columbia University
Brandon Perdomo arranges an abstracted photo assemblage juxtaposed to Rudy Francisco’s poem, Mercy. The text can be found farther down on the page.

Brandon Perdomo arranges an abstracted photo assemblage juxtaposed to Rudy Francisco’s poem, Mercy. The text can be found farther down on the page.

Brandon Perdomo presents a digital manipulation alongside Mercy, a poem by Rudy Francisco, and considers circumstance of serendipity in the process of becoming, and what coping with all that noise means anyway.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags existential questions
1 Comment

Oral History Education: Facilitating Intergenerational Learning

May 11, 2021 Admin
Image description: A collage of students enrolled in the Real World History class each posing for a photograph with their narrator after recording an oral history interview. The photographs that make up the collage are organized into a three-by-three grid.

Image description: A collage of students enrolled in the Real World History class each posing for a photograph with their narrator after recording an oral history interview. The photographs that make up the collage are organized into a three-by-three grid.

Inspired by the reflections of Dr. Winona Wheeler in a class discussion preceding the OHMA workshop series event, “Land Back! The Importance of Oral History in First Nation Land Claims Cases,” Max Peterson reflects on his experience helping to facilitate intergenerational learning through a student oral history project.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags intergenerational, intergenerational learning, family, education
1 Comment

WHOSE LAND?

May 11, 2021 Incite Institute at Columbia University
Unceded Land of the Mohican (Mahican) and Wappinger Tribes Ancram, New York. Sunlight drifts through light cloud cover onto a rolling grassy hill. Several treetops emerge from the descending slope, and in the distance more hills spread across the horizon in shadowy blues.

Unceded Land of the Mohican (Mahican) and Wappinger Tribes Ancram, New York. Sunlight drifts through light cloud cover onto a rolling grassy hill. Several treetops emerge from the descending slope, and in the distance more hills spread across the horizon in shadowy blues.

How do you define Land? What meaning does Land have for you? What if your Land was stolen from you?

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In Workshop Reflections Tags land rights, indigenous history
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Talking trauma-informed oral history project design with Gabriel Solis

May 10, 2021 Incite Institute at Columbia University
gabe_photo.jpg

On March 11, Gabriel Solis visited OHMA to share and present his work as the executive director of the Texas After Violence Project (TAVP). TAVP is a community based archive dealing in critical memory work, recording and mobilizing the stories of Texas residents whose lives have been impacted by violence in Texas—namely murder, police violence, in-custody deaths, mass incarceration and the death penalty.

We were interested to learn more about trauma-informed interviewing, pedagogical and project design approaches to community-based oral histories, and the role of archives in oral histories meant to create social change.

On April 12, Kae Bara Kratcha and Taylor Thompson met back up with Gabriel Solis, to follow up on Solis’ presentation and to learn more about his ideas concerning teaching towards trauma informed care and oral history methodology. The following is an abridged interview with him.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags trauma-informed, state violence, trauma, Interviewing
1 Comment

What Does Comfort Look Like?

May 7, 2021 Admin
Image graphic of kow piak sen by Laos in the House

Image graphic of kow piak sen by Laos in the House

Inspired by Storm Garner’s recent workshop, “Editing for the Mass Market: Tips and Tidbits from the Queens Night Market Vendor Stories Oral History Project,” wherein she chronicles stories from people of diverse backgrounds about the food they create, Rattana Bounsouaysana explores the idea around the different meanings of comfort.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags food, comfort, family
2 Comments

DESTRUCTIVELY TESTING RESPONSIBILITY: A REFLECTION FROM A NON-SURVIVOR

May 7, 2021 Admin
Carrying fragments of the chain of survivorhood (Created by Emily R. Kahn, modeled by Julia F. Kahn) Alt Text: Hands holding fragments of oral history transcripts

Carrying fragments of the chain of survivorhood (Created by Emily R. Kahn, modeled by Julia F. Kahn) 

Alt Text: Hands holding fragments of oral history transcripts

Inspired by Holly Werner-Thomas’ February 2021 OMHA workshop Changing the Narrative on Gun Violence: Survivors Want You to ‘Sit Down and Listen,’ Emily R. Kahn explores her own experiences sitting down and listening to the stories of Holocaust survivors, refugees, and their descendants. She deconstructs her conflicting feelings and sense of responsibility about telling these stories as a non-survivor.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags holocaust, survivors, trauma, stories
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Long Road from Contempt to Compassion

January 26, 2021 Admin
Photo courtesy: Vijay S. Jodha

Photo courtesy: Vijay S. Jodha

India has made transformative changes in its transgender laws in recent years which have started the process of social change. But only just.

by Harpal Singh

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In Workshop Reflections Tags India, LGBTQ, Trans stories
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Crip Camp: INCLUSION AND STORYTELLING IN CREATING ROLE MODELS FOR CHANGE-MAKERS

January 11, 2021 Incite Institute at Columbia University
An image of an A-frame sign sitting on a New York City sidewalk. Black and white capital letter tiles spell out the message “CALL ME I STILL LOVE YOU.”

This fall brought a treasure trove of workshops that introduced us to oral history projects telling the histories of marginalized communities in their own words - from Rikers’ Island inmates to New York City’s Trans community. A new documentary seeks to do the same, directed by a collaborative team that partners subject with producer. OHMA student Lisa R. Cohen spoke to the team about their very special relationship.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags art, nature
2 Comments

Detroit: Looking from the Outside In

January 11, 2021 Incite Institute at Columbia University
A chaotic 12th Street in Detroit, MI, an interesting glimpse into the uprisings. At the curb beside bumper-to-bumper traffic, a truck load of soldiers gets ready to head into the city. In the foreground, a man walks from the truck, towards the camer…

Inspired by recent OHMA Workshops that explored personal experiences of how our “homes” change over time - Sara Sinclair and Suzanne Methot’s How We Go Home: Voices from Indigenous North America, and Sarita Daftary’s on the East New York Oral History Project and the Rikers Public Memory Project – Michael Giannetti decided to conduct a listening activity with his family about their memories of Detroit, the 1967 uprising, and their contemporary ideas of the city.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags art, nature
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the transgender archive as a science fiction poem

January 9, 2021 Incite Institute at Columbia University
An image of an A-frame sign sitting on a New York City sidewalk. Black and white capital letter tiles spell out the message “CALL ME I STILL LOVE YOU.”

After Michelle O’Brien’s workshop on the NYC Trans Oral History Project, OHMA student and librarian Kae Bara Kratcha wondered whether the material needs of all trans people will ever be met well enough that all trans people who want to could spend most of their time learning and teaching their histories. To explore this question, Kae wrote and recorded a poem and created a video to accompany the recording.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags art, nature
2 Comments

Hindsight is 2020

December 31, 2020 Incite Institute at Columbia University
An image of an A-frame sign sitting on a New York City sidewalk. Black and white capital letter tiles spell out the message “CALL ME I STILL LOVE YOU.”

How I learned to stop worrying and love Zoom, live theatre, and talking on the telephone; and what they all taught me about in-person interviews. (Remember those?)

By: Casey Dooley

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In Workshop Reflections Tags art, nature
2 Comments

Teaching War to Children

December 29, 2020 Incite Institute at Columbia University
Elena Aguilar, an educator, shares a drawing, made by a Laotian boy, depicting his experience during the U.S. government’s secret bombing campaign of Laos. From 1964 to 1973, more than two million tons of bombs hit Laos causing countless villages an…

Elena Aguilar, an educator, shares a drawing, made by a Laotian boy, depicting his experience during the U.S. government’s secret bombing campaign of Laos. From 1964 to 1973, more than two million tons of bombs hit Laos causing countless villages and lives to be destroyed. [1]

How should educators navigate controversial issues like war in their lesson plans? Current OHMA student and veterans’ oral historian Elizabeth Jefimova offers a few tips for educators looking to incorporate the topic of war into their curriculum and how oral history methodology provides a unique solution in teaching war.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags art, nature
1 Comment

Testimony of the Body and The Experience of Becoming

December 29, 2020 Incite Institute at Columbia University
[ - a grid displays images of a body in motion - ]

Brandon Perdomo writes about testimony in relation to the body and response to social-scape by activation-of-voice in response to a presentation by both Sara Sinclair on her work on How We Go Home, and Suzanne Methot, who complements the piece with curriculum-building for Voice Of Witness.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags art, nature
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Reach for the Moon or The Grass is Always Greener

December 21, 2020 Incite Institute at Columbia University
Separated by a white matte, two grayscale images depict tall grasses reaching into a bright cloudy sky (left) and a hand-sketched monkey hanging by one arm from a cliffside branch (right). Found natural objects like pine needles and seashells overla…

Two thought experiments emerged in response to Leanne Betasamosake Simpson’s presentation at OHMA on November 12, 2020. They take the form of a diptych collage titled “Reach for the Moon or The Grass is Always Greener”.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags art, nature
2 Comments

Building Beyond Convention: Strategies for Processing Liberatory Creative Practices

December 16, 2020 Incite Institute at Columbia University
Image above features the cover art of Leanne Simpson’s books Noompiming: The Cure for White Ladies and As We Have Always Done: Indiginous Freedom Through Radical Resistance. The Noompiming cover features a human figure lying on their side, facing aw…

Image above features the cover art of Leanne Simpson’s books Noompiming: The Cure for White Ladies and As We Have Always Done: Indiginous Freedom Through Radical Resistance. The Noompiming cover features a human figure lying on their side, facing away from the viewer, with a diagonal cut down their bare back. The As We Have Always Done cover features the name of the book in large block print with a blue water-like background and trees at the top of the water.

With a small group of co-moderators, a cohort of OHMA Students participating in the Workshop course had the opportunity to host a seminar with Dr. Leanne Betasamosake Simpson. For three and a half years I’d been poring over her book As We Have Always Done: Indiginous Freedom Through Radical Resistance, and I was finally meeting her in person—well via Zoom. As a student of economics, I had always wanted to ask about integrating politics of decolonization, radical resistance, and black-feminist politics into disciplines like economics or STEM. The following is a meditation on the wisdom that Dr. Simpson shared in our seminar, and the personal strategies I have been cultivating based on that dialogue.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags Indigenous, decolonization, resistance, politics
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Preservation as Violence: The problem facing museum collections

December 16, 2020 Incite Institute at Columbia University
This is an image from the music video for “How to Steal a Canoe” from the 2016 album f(l)ight by Leanne Betasamosake Simpson. The video uses miniature models and stop-motion animation. In the image three birchbark canoes hang, suspended by chains, i…

This is an image from the music video for “How to Steal a Canoe” from the 2016 album f(l)ight by Leanne Betasamosake Simpson. The video uses miniature models and stop-motion animation. In the image three birchbark canoes hang, suspended by chains, in a dark warehouse space.

Leanne Betasamosake Simpson presents an ethical framework around consent that challenges the way museums currently handle material culture. Oral history presents one way to navigate these challenges and to preserve the relationship between object and community.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags Indigenous, Museums, ritual
2 Comments

“That was going to be the family home and be there forever”

December 10, 2020 Incite Institute at Columbia University
Image by Michael Zirkle Photography, copyright Raleigh Historic Development Commission.A carousel with painted horses rests idle under a park pavilion, empty of riders but lit up invitingly.

Image by Michael Zirkle Photography, copyright Raleigh Historic Development Commission.

A carousel with painted horses rests idle under a park pavilion, empty of riders but lit up invitingly.

The Chavis Carousel is the centerpiece of the 37-acre park in the Raleigh, North Carolina neighborhood, Chavis. When the park opened in 1938, it was the only African American park in the Southeast United States. Because of this, it was visited by many African Americans throughout North Carolina as well as other states. Following the end of segregation the park and surrounding neighborhoods began to decline under various influences. The City pledged re-investment in the park ten years ago and is just now beginning to fulfill that promise.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags gentrification, locations, neighborhood, Race
5 Comments

A Heroine’s Journey Through History

November 24, 2020 Incite Institute at Columbia University
A photo I recently took at a Detroit railroad underpass on Trumbull St. A colorful mural of “Black Lives Matter” painted into the geometric design on a division between the road and nature.

A photo I recently took at a Detroit railroad underpass on Trumbull St. A colorful mural of “Black Lives Matter” painted into the geometric design on a division between the road and nature.

After navigating Sarita Daftary-Steel’s East New York Oral History (ENYOH) Project, a current MFA dramaturgy student, Kate Foster, reflects on her journey to uncover and understand her family’s history in Detroit, MI. She remarks on the benefits of agency in learning history and discovers connections between the ENYOH Project and the elements of a documentary play.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags performance, family
5 Comments

Reflections on East New York

November 22, 2020 Admin
In this black and white photo, the writers' grandparents, Papa Bruno and Nonna, pose for a portrait with their young son Robert, who is a toddler. Papa Bruno and Nonna are in their mid-twenties and both fair skinned with dark hair. Papa Bruno sits o…

In this black and white photo, the writers' grandparents, Papa Bruno and Nonna, pose for a portrait with their young son Robert, who is a toddler. Papa Bruno and Nonna are in their mid-twenties and both fair skinned with dark hair. Papa Bruno sits on the left, wearing a white shirt and print tie. Nonna sits on the right, wearing a white dress and a necklace. Uncle Robert sits in the middle and also wears a white shirt.

This personal timeline essay is inspired by the East New York Oral History Project’s interactive timeline, which allows visitors to learn about the historical and political contexts of racial segregation on local, regional and national levels. Although the project’s timeline is on a grand scale, it caused me to reflect on my tenuous personal experiences in East New York, and sent me on a journey to learn more about my family history in the neighborhood.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags family, neighborhood, politics
5 Comments
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Oral History Master of Arts
Incite Institute at Columbia University
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