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Digital history - a lecture and discussion event of the Master's program "History and the Public Sphere"

"History digital" - How does social media enrich the teaching of history?
History students would like to address this question with guests from the fields of archiving digital sources, podcasts and social networks. We also cordially invite you to participate in the panel discussion and a subsequent Open Forum, in which we want to look at the users' perspective on digital history education.

 

Guests and schedule
10:00 - 11:00 a.m.: Under the motto "Sharing is caring - become a part of history!", the "coronarchiv" website went online in spring 2020. Memories and experiences of the pandemic can be shared here in order to record them for posterity and future research. Co-initiator Benjamin Roers will present what it means to publicly collect digital material for historical research.
https://coronarchiv.blogs.uni-hamburg.de/

11:00 - 12:00: By presenting her Instagram page, Master's student Laura Baumgarten from the University of Halle will offer an insight into her social media project "Frau Abgeordnete" (Woman MPs), which is represented on various channels - where she deals with the biographies of the first 111 female parliamentarians of the Reichstag of the Weimar Republic.
www.instagram.com/frauabgeordnete/

12:00 - 13:00: With a focus on popular culture and queer studies, Dr. Sabrina Mittermeier researches US-American history in a transnational context at the University of Kassel. She would like to talk to us about the role of the social platform Twitter in academic networking among historians and the advantages and disadvantages of one's own visibility as a scholar on social media platforms.
https://twitter.com/S_Mittermeier

Followed by: Open Forum. How is the communication of history perceived by users?

Participation via Zoom meeting at the following link:
uni-kassel.zoom.us/j/94186898884
Meeting ID: 941 8689 8884 ID code: 814416

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