Interdisciplinary Studies and the New Technologies: A Case Study
go to original version with critical reviews
History
The initial impetus for the American Studies M.A. program at the University of
Virginia was threefold.
First, in 1994 the English Department had reached a critical juncture in its graduate
program: it had passed from unwittingly accumulating the world's largest stock of
unemployed Ph.D.s and ABDs and had become a knowing producer of unemployable graduate
students in English. Unable to accept what one of my colleagues termed the
"recreational Ph.D.," I determined to create a terminal M.A. that would re-tool
bright and capable students for productive work outside the academy.
Second, I saw a larger trend in which "education" was leaking out of the
colleges and universities, being taken up by a mix of traditional (libraries and museums)
and non-traditional institutions (centers, proprietary universities, amateur historians).
This was happening because the new technologies permitted it, because the Humanities had--by their resistance to public accountability and their inability to articulate the
social value of their enterprise through presenting the undergraduate and
graduate curricula as
something more than the means to produce even more unemployable
academics, and by their inability to engage in meaningful examination and reform of
themselves--essentially defaulted on their traditional obligations and filed for
bankruptcy.
Third, the new technologies just coming on line in 1994 held remarkable promise for
interdisciplinary fields and especially for American Studies. In their scale/complexity
and in their multimedia capacity, they offered the means by which genuine
multi-disciplinary work could be pursued. They offered tools for constructing the more
sophisticated models of cultural process that were emerging. They suggested a way past the
post-structural theory and identity politics that had come to dominate interdisciplinary
studies. And, in their ability to integrate various and dissimilar kinds of "cultural
texts," not only the print that is our traditional subject and medium, but also the
images, objects, and events about which Americanists often attempt to speak, they looked
like a platform in which genuinely sophisticated cross-disciplinary work could be done.
Since my objective was to prepare students for work outside the university--or at best
along its periphery--I looked into what people in higher education, corporations, and the
public sector were saying about their needs. I found a remarkable degree of agreement.
They wanted employees who had all the things that a classic liberal arts curriculum claims
to provide: the ability to think critically and analytically, the ability to be articulate
in writing and in speech, and the ability to make informed and subtle judgments. They also
wanted people who could work in groups, who could carry out projects efficiently and on
schedule, who could "think outside the boxes," and who could bring imagination and
intellectual daring to an enterprise. And they wanted people who were literate in the new
technologies, who had both practical experience and theoretical understanding of the
technologies that were transforming the work place and the culture as a whole.
Curriculum Design
The initial program design, then, was an attempt to create a curriculum that would build
on the traditional objectives and methods of the humanities, but add to them the active,
collaborative, and reality-based work. The intention was to transform students from
passive consumers of information into active producers of information who could
effectively use information technology tools. At the very beginning, I informed the first
group of students that they had not actually enrolled in a program--because the program
did not yet exist--but had signed on to build that program. They would certainly hear and
read about American Studies but more importantly, they were going to "do"
American studies. I wanted to collapse the distinctions between teaching and learning,
research and teaching. I wanted them to have a sense that their work mattered in the
larger public sphere, to challenge them to do work that wouldn't end up in someone's
wastebasket at the end of the term but would be pushed out into the street to be tested
and used by a wider audience.
On its face, the curriculum was not significantly different from any masters level program
in the country--three core seminars and seven courses inside and outside the English
department. What was different was the approach: I asked them three simple questions:
"Where do you think you're going next? What knowledge and skills do you need to
acquire before you get there? What synergies are available, between this course and what
you already know, between this course and the courses you're going to take at the same
time, between this course and the work you're doing in the American studies
seminar for
the term. They explore art history and architectural history, sociology and
economics
and history, government and even education and law. What holds this
universe of individual choices together is the American studies seminar sequence and the
thesis seminar. These seminars are designed both to provide students with the opportunity and means to
weld a variety of subjects into some sort of whole, to share their new-found expertise with others
in the class (learning by teaching others) and to apply that expertise to electronic
projects that are then published on the web.
The curriculum, then, aspires to be more than an accumulation of credit hours,
an integrated and integrative educational process. The program begins with an introduction
to research methods course that trains students to work in the library and to do
electronic research which I put to work by assigning each student to be the editor of one
segment of the Yellow Pages.
Next, students are introduced to scanning, optical character recognition systems, and
basic HTML tagging and are assigned short texts--critical articles, short stories, pieces
of longer works that are in production--to internalize those skills by applying them.
Over time, this has yielded much of the reading material done in both graduate and
undergraduate American Studies courses; at this point, about 40-50% of any syllabi is accessible on-line.
Next, students are trained in PhotoShop and given instruction on the use of images on the
web. Improving visual literacy is a major challenge that is developed gradually through
the program.
This year's class was then given the task of mounting an exhibit on Fortune magazine
covers from the 1930s, an exercise in image manipulation and visual literacy as well as a
study of the ways in which the Depression was inflected and refracted by this publication.
By the second half of the semester, students were asked to create a small hypertext project
that integrated
all that they had learned to that point. Initially, the projects were
focused on Smith's
Virgin Land and were aimed at elaborating on his argument, on providing extended information and analysis that Smith's publisher
could not afford to include in the printed text,
or providing material Smith did not see or
consider important--or just misunderstood. This year's class has begun building a similar
site based on Alan Trachtenberg's The Incorporation of
America; they've digitized
the full text, written a synoptic version for distribution outside the UVA campus, and
created the first generation of satellite projects for the core-text.
The second semester seminar, ENAM 803, is given over to designing, constructing, or
amplifying a much larger group project. The first of these was The Capital Project begun in
1995; currently we are working in the
1930s, a site begun last year, which is being extended by this year's class. The first task
last year was to focus the site conceptually, to design its gross architecture, and to
create the first generation of projects. The task for this year was to extend the site
by looking at the mass mediation of culture in the period by film, radio,
photography, and mass circulation print. To do this, we had to add audio and video to our
skills base and acquire some models for interpreting the cultural effects of mass media.
Students were asked to select "iconic moments" from comics and cartoons, radio
programs, films, and documentary photography from the period and to learn how to create
sound and video files for their distribution. The result was an exhibition tentatively
called "seascapes/soundscapes," a display space where, over time, we'll try to
create a kind of taxonomy of mediated culture in the period. At this point in the
semester, students are in the initial design phase of their larger projects for the
semester. Last semester, the projects included analyses of Hoover Dam, the invention of
country music, Vanity Fair magazine, the Chrysler Building, Charlie Chaplin,
Gone With
the Wind and Absalom, Absalom, a comparison of the depression in
the United
States and in Europe, and on two of Pare Lorenz's documentary films, The
Plow that Broke
the Plains and The River. As part of this year's process, students are being asked
to critique last year's projects and to offer re-designs for them. At the same time,
they're forming up their own projects which include "Amos 'n Andy go to
Market," "The 1933 Chicago Century of Progress Exposition," "Graphic
Design in the 30s," "The National Park Service and the Reconstruction of
American Landscape," and "Woody Guthrie and the Folk."
Also in the spring term, I organized the students as a virtual web design and development
firm and each student has assumed the role and responsibilities of a particular job
description: technical support, project manager, professional development, marketing,
editor, or placement. They will have that job throughout the semester then assume a
different one the next.
Finally, the third semester, ENAM 804, is devoted to the master's thesis. This is a
summative exercise, a full demonstration of the knowledge and skills acquired in the
program. I compare the students' task to that of 18th Century cabinetmakers who built
scale models of their work to show around the countryside. Their job is to create in
miniature a comprehensive demonstration of actual competencies. After the project has been
built, each student will sit for an examination by two professors, myself and someone from
English or another department. I've shamelessly used this as an opportunity to educate my
colleagues about humanities computing and to seek out alliances around the University as
well as to provide students the challenge of explaining their work to people who are not
computer literate.
Throughout their tenure in the program, students are encouraged to work part-time at
relevant jobs, on campus at places like the Electronic Text Center and The Institute for
Advanced Technology in the Humanities, or off campus at private firms. Periodically,
students on work-study build sites for non-profit organizations and for my colleagues. In
short, wherever possible, I find ways to integrate the mundane business of paying for the
bills with experiences that enhance their training and fatten their portfolios.
Results
The results produced by the program can, in one sense, be measured by a thoughtful
exploration of AS@UVA [please
link to the site here], the Web site for the program. After four years of work, the site
presents four major components. First, The Yellow Pages for American Studies,
a selective, annotated directory to the best electronic resources for students and
teachers in the field. Second, The
Museum for American Studies, a series of museum-like multimedia exhibitions on topics
ranging from the art of Grant Wood to the New York World's Fair of 1939-40 to the nature
illustrations of Alexander Wilson's American Ornithology. Third, the largest and most
fully developed section of the site, Hypertexts is a collection of some
fifty electronic texts in American Studies, either "classics" like
DeTocqueville's Democracy in America and Henry Nash Smith's Virgin
Land: The West as
Symbol and Myth, or "lost" texts, once powerful works like Gilbert
Seldes' The
Seven Lively Arts or Herman Melville's The Confidence Man, books that, for various
reasons, have disappeared from view and consideration. Fourth, The Capitol which, as the
introduction to that project has it, is "an infinitely extensible exploration of the
National Capitol as an American icon--the cathedral of our national faith, the map of our
public memory, and the monument to our official culture." And fifth, The 1930s, an effort begun last
year to explore and re-present the most academically unfashionable decade in American
Studies circles, and arguably the most important one for an understanding of modern
America.
All of this is, in a superficial sense, what the American Studies Master's Program has
accomplished in its short history. The site has won numerous awards; it is linked to by
more than 3,000 other sites; it now attracts about 80,000 hits per day, primarily from
teachers and students. And all of this at minimal cost to the University. But, as I've
already said, this is really no more than the by-product of the more important educational
process. To assess the value of that process, you will have to speak with the students themselves.
In general, they've gone to places they could not otherwise have gone to, taken jobs that
are more responsible and interesting - at better pay - than they could have otherwise, and
they are moving up in those organizations. Some few have gone on to graduate programs in
American Studies or English, but the majority have gone to work for public or corporate
information providers, to PBS, Microsoft, Educorp, Maryland Public Television, The Kennedy
Center, the Smithsonian, Washington and Lee University, The University of Alabama, Teach for
America, Sacred Places, and NetBeans.
The Future
We have begun to implement much
of the curricular structures
and objectives described here in our two-year undergraduate program and,
with some modest tweaking, they promise to work just as well at that level. In addition, we
are, in effect, exporting this model to other interdisciplinary programs here,
particularly a new Media Studies Program that will come on line in 2002-2003. Finally, we
are actively looking for partners at other institutions, American Studies or other
interdisciplinary programs with whom we might design collaborative, trans-institutional
courses.