Author: Doing History in Public

  • ‘Experience doesn’t pay the bills’: a lesson from medieval England

    ‘Experience doesn’t pay the bills’: a lesson from medieval England

    By Rhiannon Sandy (@RhiannonSandy) A few weeks ago, in my daily perusal of Twitter, I came across a retweet which made me angry enough to write a blogpost. Questioned as to why interns should be paid if they’re ‘getting experience for their résumé’, US Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez posted a short video answer – ‘experience doesn’t…

  • Thinking about Sleep Across History

    Thinking about Sleep Across History

    By Albert Kohn In a certain sense, sleeping is the great unifying experience across time and place. Regardless of time period, almost every person spends one-third to one-half of their life asleep thus a good portion of our modern lives are identical to those of medieval people! Yet, sleeping is not just the experience of…

  • Film archives: using moving images as historical sources

    Film archives: using moving images as historical sources

    By Max Long My first encounter with moving image archives took place in a windowless room in the basement of a building in London. I was there to view a selection of natural history films. I had watched similar films online, but here I could load, spool, and wind up the films myself. Films are…

  • Reconsidering the History of Domestic Medicine

    Reconsidering the History of Domestic Medicine

    By Jennifer W. Reiss The history of American medicine often follows a declension/ascension narrative: it’s a teleology of medical progress dominated by professionalised and scientifically-minded male physicians of the nineteenth century bringing the light of modernity to backward-looking, female-dominated folk practice of earlier periods. Even comparable British scholarship on early modern medical history follows a…

  • How to abuse and misuse history: a guide from twentieth-century politics

    How to abuse and misuse history: a guide from twentieth-century politics

    By Spike Lister The utilisation of history in political discourse has itself a long history. For as long as there has been a public space and a shared experience, communities have looked to the past as a lens through which to understand their issues. History offers us a guiding light by which to move forwards…