Event Type

Webinar/Virtual Event

Contact Info

Website

Event Description

Imagining the Future of Urban History: Digital Tools and Collaboration

UHA Zoom Panel

Thursday, July 24th

12:00 PM, EDT

The way we do urban history is changing. In 2023, the American Historical Association approved guidelines that broadened the definition of historical scholarship. In addition to traditional modes of historical writing, such as academic monographs and peer-reviewed journal articles, the new AHA guidelines also include op-eds, public lectures, podcasts, and other formats. 

Join us for a dynamic academic event featuring a panel that surveys various ways in which artists, scholars, and critics are embracing new methods in urban history. The discussion will highlight digital archiving, public history initiatives, and the impact of digital tools on historical scholarship and education. This panel offers a unique opportunity to engage with current debates and future directions in the rapidly evolving field of digital history. Open to students, faculty, and the public.

REGISTER HERE

Upon registration, you will receive an email to confirm your registration and a Zoom link for the event. 

SPEAKERS

Ryan Purcell, Moderator 

Modern American History 

Fordham University 

Jessica Lynne

Writer, critic, and founding editor of ARTS.BLACK, an online journal of art criticism from Black perspectives.

Lynne’s five-part audio series features a dynamic cast of speakers who reflect on the legacy and cultural impact of the Harlem Renaissance.

See Lynne’s podcast on the Harlem Renaissance for the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Harlem is Everywhere

Stephen Petrus, Director of Public History Programs

LaGuardia and Wagner Archives

Petrus’s work demonstrates how digital historical exhibitions can expand audiences and deliver the content directly to classrooms. 

See Petrus’s online exhibit The Battle for Intro. 2: The New York City Gay Rights Bill, 1971-1986 

Eric Haeusler, Postdoctoral Research Scholar

D-ARCH, ETH Zürich 

and

Thomas Hänsli, Director GTA Digital

The Archive of the Urban Age combines historical scholarship with cutting-edge digital methods to reinterpret the emergence of the “Urban Age” as a global discourse. At its core is the journal Ekistics (1955–2007), a rich but under explored archive of debates on cities, planning, and urban futures. Through AI-assisted digitization, semantic modeling, and large language models, the project creates an open-access, machine-readable research platform that enables new forms of inquiry into urban history.

Genji Siraisi, Executive Director

MOMENT NYC 

MOMENT is the past, present, and future of music as seen through the unique lens of New York City. A collective archive and living museum of music, dedicated to the history of cultural diversity in NYC.

Learn more about MOMENT NYC here