Abstract
Ashley Barnwell and Laura King converse about their collaborations with family historians in Australia and England. They reveal the potential uses of collaboration when challenging understandings of ‘the family’, decolonizing and declassing historical scholarship on the family and the wellbeing benefits for family history researchers and carers.
Published Online: 2020-01-11
© 2019 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Section on family history, edited by Tanya Evans and Jerome de Groot
- Emerging questions in family history studies
- Introduction: Emerging Directions for Family History Studies
- Family History and the Global Politics of DNA
- Family History Collaborators in Conversation
- “The Genealogical sublime”: An Interview with Julie Creet
- The Roles of Authenticity and Immediacy in Engaging Family Historians in Online Learning Designed to Advance Academic Skills
- Practical Solutions: Genealogy and the Potential of Public Pedagogy in Poland
- Conversation
- “A Fool’s errand”: Lonnie Bunch and the Creation of the National Museum of African American History and Culture
- PH in
- Some Reflections on Public History in Canada Today
- Reviews
- Andersen, Tea Sindbæk and Barbara Törnquist-Plewa: Disputed Memory: Emotions and Memory Politics in Central, Eastern and South-Eastern Europe
- Paul Ashton and Alex Trapeznik: What is Public History Globally? Working with the Past in the Present
Articles in the same Issue
- Section on family history, edited by Tanya Evans and Jerome de Groot
- Emerging questions in family history studies
- Introduction: Emerging Directions for Family History Studies
- Family History and the Global Politics of DNA
- Family History Collaborators in Conversation
- “The Genealogical sublime”: An Interview with Julie Creet
- The Roles of Authenticity and Immediacy in Engaging Family Historians in Online Learning Designed to Advance Academic Skills
- Practical Solutions: Genealogy and the Potential of Public Pedagogy in Poland
- Conversation
- “A Fool’s errand”: Lonnie Bunch and the Creation of the National Museum of African American History and Culture
- PH in
- Some Reflections on Public History in Canada Today
- Reviews
- Andersen, Tea Sindbæk and Barbara Törnquist-Plewa: Disputed Memory: Emotions and Memory Politics in Central, Eastern and South-Eastern Europe
- Paul Ashton and Alex Trapeznik: What is Public History Globally? Working with the Past in the Present