User:Domusaurea/talks/Amsterdam - Public History conference 2014

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Ultimate Public History, or how historians can make peace with Wikipedia

October 24, 2014, University of Amsterdam


Rosenzweig, Roy. "Can history be open source? Wikipedia and the future of the past." The Journal of American History 93.1 (2006): 117-146.

Limitations of Wikipedia (Rosenzweig)[edit]

"denigration of expertise"[edit]

... Wikipedia (like encyclopaedias in general) summarizes and reports the conventional and accepted wisdom on a topic but does not break new ground. And someone whose expertise rests on having done extensive original research on a topic gets no particular respect. (p. 121-122)

- Example: my userpage (en)
- Example: "Domusaurea's" first article: Ammianus Marcellinus (in Portuguese)

Popular culture and bias[edit]

"geek priorities" have shaped the encyclopedia (p. 127)

- Example: List of voice actors in the Grand Theft Auto series

  • Biases: English speaking, Western, male
  • For History:

Wikipedia is surprisingly accurate in reporting names, dates and events in US history. (p. 128)

Lyndon LaRouche, controversial activist not on American National Biography online

Antiquarianism/factualism[edit]

Wikipedia's view of history is not only more anedoctal and colorful than professional history, it is also - again like much popular history - more factualist. (p. 142)

Professional historians might find an account accurate and fair but trivial; that is what some see as the difference between history and antiquarianism. Thus, the conflict between professionals and amateurs is not necessarily a simple one over whether people are doing good or bad history but a more complex (and more interesting) conflict about what kind of history is being done. (p. 141)

Style[edit]

Good historical writing requires not just factual accuracy but also a command of the scholarly literature, persuasive analysis and interpretations, and clear and engaging prose. (p. 129)

Advantages of Wikipedia (Rosenzweig)[edit]

Everyone uses (esp. students)[edit]

Free and accessible[edit]

- Example: People are Knowledge - documentary on Vimeo

"Did the New Deal resolve the problems of the Great Depression?" (p. 139)

Develops skills[edit]

  • Writing and researching

[A PhD student and Wikipedia editor] "I use it primarily to practice writing for a non-academic audience, and as a way to solidify my understanding of topics (nothing helps one remember things like rewriting it)". (p. 143)

  • Information literacy

[What to do] Spend more time teaching about the limitations of all information sources, including Wikipedia, and emphasizing the skills of critical analysis of primary and secondary sources. (p. 137)

Solutions to Rosenzweig's ideas[edit]

Wikipedia Education Program[edit]

Public Policy US Initiative, 2009

- Example: undergraduate course - A História Romana na Wikipédia
- Example: workshops - Ancient greek vases
- Example: community support - Ambassador Program

Wikisource (en)[edit]

What if we organized a similar [to Genealogy projects] "distributed transcribers" to work on handwritten historical documents that otherwise will never be digitized? (p. 144)

- Example: Manuscrito 512 (in Portuguese)

Wikiversity (en)[edit]

Could we, for example, write a collaborative U.S. history textbook that would be free to all our students? (p. 145)

- Example: Historical Introduction to Philosophy

GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives ans Museums)[edit]

- Example: National Library and National Archives of the Netherlands


Thank you!

Contact: wikipediaunirio at gmail dot com