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Kickstarting Scholarship: Crowdsourcing as a Historical Tool

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 June 2014

Kathleen E. Bachynski*
Affiliation:
Columbia University, USA
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Abstract

Type
Media Review
Copyright
Copyright © The Author 2014. Published by Cambridge University Press. 

Kickstarting Scholarship: Crowdsourcing as a Historical Tool ‘Crowdsourcing’ history, in other words, using social media to collaboratively raise and address historical questions, is taking place across many online venues, from private Facebook pages to popular news websites. Professional scholars pose questions that attract input from amateur historians and specialists in other fields; conversely, journalists, scientists and other interested laypeople use social media to solicit the expertise of historians. As Leslie Madsen-Brooks observes, new digital platforms ‘not only are democratizing historical practice, but also providing professional historians with new opportunities and modes for expanding historical literacy.’Footnote 1

To examine some of the promises and perils of crowdsourcing as a historical tool, this review will examine a few examples from the blog of Ta-Nehisi Coates, a senior editor at The Atlantic magazine. This heavily moderated blog is notable for the number and wide-ranging expertise of the commentators it attracts, including professional scholars as well as amateur historians. Posts will often result in 300–400 comments. Coates, a journalist with deep interests in history, has used this platform to try to crowdsource historical questions in several ways, three of which I will briefly review: seeking information about a topic he is unfamiliar with, placing current events in historical context, and structuring conversations around particular primary or secondary sources.

First, Coates has posed numerous historical questions related to topics he knows little about, often prefaced with the phrase: ‘talk to me like I’m stupid’. For example, in one blog post he asked his readership: ‘How did Americans hunt in the era just before the shotgun?’.Footnote 2 Many of the responses were impressive. Readers offered detailed and clear explanations of smoothbore muskets and minié balls, and provided suggested additional readings and resources. Other comments, while sometimes entertaining, such as a reference to using the keyboard’s spacebar key to hunt buffalo in the popular game Oregon Trail, were not exactly illuminating. In such threads, readers frequently need to sort through numerous jokes and digressive comments to locate pertinent and substantive responses.

As a second category of crowdsourcing, Coates has sought to place news events and commentary by public figures in historical context. For instance, in response to Ron Paul’s comments that Abraham Lincoln could and should have averted the Civil War by buying and freeing all the slaves, Coates composed a series of posts examining why this was not feasible. Numerous readers and other authors contributed insights. One professional historian whose research focused on the relation of slavery to credit, for example, contributed a detailed analysis of why England could manage compensated emancipation, but not the United States. The comments referenced the work of a number of historians, including David Brion Davis, Stephen Deyle and Walter Johnson.Footnote 3 They also included links to illustrative primary source material, notably an article from the April 1861 edition of The Atlantic Monthly in which John William de Forest talked to residents of Charleston, South Carolina about their state’s decision to secede.Footnote 4 Taken as a whole, the blog’s comments section furnished a variety of pertinent insights contextualising the remarks of a prominent politician, although it did not tread new ground or offer a comprehensive, systematic examination of this historical question.

Third, the blog has featured numerous conversations focused on particular historical documents or books. The blog’s book club has primarily focused on works related to the Civil War, such as Eric Foner’s Reconstruction and Chandra Manning’s What This Cruel War Was Over. These conversations were largely engaging and successful. In fact, Professor Manning chimed in to say she found the discussion of her book ‘enormously gratifying’.Footnote 5 The conversations almost never resulted in new research or findings, however; they simply provided a vibrant outlet for discussion.

Regarding crowdsourcing of questions related to primary source material, one of the most impressive cases resulted from a posting of an 1864 letter written by a sergeant in the 1st US Colored Troops. The author, who signed his name as GWH, described capturing a former slave owner as follows:

While out on a foraging expedition we captured Mr. Clayton, a noted reb in this part of the country, and from his appearance, one of the F.F.V.’s; on the day before we captured several colored women that belonged to Mr C., who had given them a most unmerciful whipping previous to their departure.Footnote 6

One knowledgeable amateur historian, Andy Hall, identified the acronym ‘F.F.V.’ as referring to the ‘First Families of Virginia, i.e., the “old money” planter aristocracy,’ adding ‘I’ve seen F.F.V. used in a mocking way by both Northern and Southern troops – it wasn’t a compliment’. Hall then searched census and service records to find more information about the letter writer ‘GWH’, who had been identified as George W. Hatton in the book A Grand Army Of Black Men: Letters of African-American Soldiers in the Union Army: 1861–1865, edited by Edwin S. Redkey.Footnote 7 Relying on these various records, Hall managed to trace numerous remarkable details about Hatton’s life and composed a fascinating account he shared on the blog.Footnote 8

To date, this is one of the most successful instances of crowdsourcing that I have observed. It required an author who had built and was willing to engage with a skilled, knowledgeable and passionate readership. It resulted in an ability to quickly and effectively trace details of this soldier’s life, and to place a primary source from the Civil War in relevant historical context for many readers of The Atlantic.

Through his blog, Coates has initiated conversations which have enabled the formation of a diverse intellectual community, a sizable platform for disseminating and discussing primary source materials, the opportunity for knowledgeable amateurs to contribute, and the ability to more rapidly and directly engage with historical questions and debates sparked by contemporary news events. Yet contributors’ backgrounds and the authority from which they speak is sometimes unclear. While exceptionally knowledgeable people may delve into archives and cite their sources, far more often commentators provide unsourced observations that must be verified. Moreover, the format demands intensive, time-consuming moderation, and discussions often exhibit an inconsistent degree of rigor and thoroughness.

Overall, crowdsourcing history on a public blog provides rich possibilities for engaging with a broader audience and involving readers in historical thinking. Such conversations require careful management, however, and they do not invariably yield productive scholarly discourse. They are more likely to be successful when they are more tightly focused, on a particular book or document for example. Any researcher who relies on crowdsourcing should be aware of the approach’s significant limitations and biases, and of the need to sort through and verify large amounts of information of uneven reliability. Furthermore, crowdsourcing tends to work better when the goal is to quickly compile and share knowledge that is already available, rather than as a means to engage in original research. Crowdsourcing cannot replace more traditional historical methods, but as a means to broaden exposure to and engagement with historical questions, it is a powerful tool.

References

1. Leslie Madsen-Brooks, “‘I nevertheless am a historian”: Digital historical practice and malpractice around black confederate soldiers’, in Jack Dougherty and Kristen Nawrotzki (eds), Writing History in the Digital Age(Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 2012), http://writinghistory.trincoll.edu/crowdsourcing/madsen-brooks-2012-spring/, accessed 3 February 2014.Google Scholar

2. Ta-Nehisi Coates, ‘Talk to Me Like I’m Stupid: Hunting in the Late Antebellum Era’, The Atlantic, 10 June 2010, http://www.theatlantic.com/personal/archive/2010/06/talk-to-me-like-im-stupid-hunting-in-the-late-antebellum-era/58005/, accessed 31 January 2014.Google Scholar

3. Ta-Nehisi Coates, ‘Compensation’, The Atlantic, 23 January 2012, http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2012/01/compensation/251804/, accessed 2 February 2014.Google Scholar

4. John William De Forest, ‘Charleston Under Arms’, The Atlantic Monthly, April 1861, http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1861/04/charleston-under-arms/308742/, Accessed 3 February 2014.Google Scholar

5. Ta-Nehisi Coates, ‘Effete Liberalism Bomaye’, The Atlantic, 20 May 2011, http://www.theatlantic.com/personal/archive/2011/05/effete-liberalism-bomaye/239223/, accessed 3 February 2014.Google Scholar

6. Ta-Nehisi Coates, ‘The Very Spot Where the First Sons of Africa Were Landed’, The Atlantic, 9 December 2010,  http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2010/12/the-very-spot-where-the-first-sons-of-africa-were-landed/67717/, accessed 3 February 2014.Google Scholar

7. Redkey, Edwin S., A Grand Army Of Black Men: Letters of African-American Soldiers in the Union Army: 1861–65 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

8. Ta-Nehisi Coates, ‘The First Sons of Africa, Cont.’, The Atlantic, 10 December 2010,  http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2010/12/the-first-sons-of-africa-cont/67930/, accessed 2 February 2014.Google Scholar