Making History with the Masses

Citizen History and Radical Trust in Museums

Museums as institutions of the 21st century have progressed quite a ways from the Wunderkammer of generations before. The 21st century museum takes the audience as its starting point and seeks out ways to rely upon its collections and the expertise of its staff to teach not only content but also skills; to be a venue not just for silent contemplation of its artifacts but where conversations that help to define and shape society may find a starting point and a home. Even with this more open approach to dialogue around collections, museums still struggle with how far to allow their visitors into their scholarship and their “stuff,” fearing for their status as authorities in their fields should amateurs be welcomed into that part of the conversation. For history museums, Citizen History is one way to bring users worldwide into a dialogue based upon the museum’s collections and ongoing scholarship. Building from practices established in citizen science, Citizen History engages amateur scholars and enthusiasts in contemplating and answering authentic questions, building from research and resources held by the museum as authority but being open to the new ideas, questions, and ways of thinking brought by these new collaborators. Moreover, these projects help to grow online communities and stakeholders for the host institution, and promote expansion of open access to digital resources in order to provide users with as many tools as possible to help the museum answer its questions. In her Digital Dialogue, Ms. Frankle will discuss her experiences and discoveries as the community manager of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s first experimental Citizen History project, “Children of the Lodz Ghetto: A Memorial Research Project.” She will also explore best practices for establishing and managing Citizen History projects, and how to work cross-departmentally within a museum, library, or archive to build and sustain a platform that helps both the institution and its users to grow.

Speakers

Elissa Frankle
Elissa Frankle
Digital Projects Coordinator of Digital Learning and New MediaUnited States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Elissa Frankle is the Digital Projects Coordinator for Digital Learning and New Media at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, where she manages the in-museum digital experience and advocates for the inclusion of visitor voices in the work of the Museum. A longtime cheerleader for citizen history, Elissa served as the community manager for the Holocaust Museum's first citizen history project, Children of the Lodz Ghetto: A Memorial Research Project, and is the current project lead for History Unfolded: US Newspapers and the Holocaust, a major citizen history undertaking in support of the Museum's upcoming initiative on Americans and the Holocaust. Outside of work, Elissa serves as the Leadership Development and Awards chair for the American Alliance of Museums' Education Professional Network (EdCom), and organizes the DC chapter of Museum Workers Speak, where she fights for paid internships and greater equity in museum labor practices throughout the field.