Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / AASLH
Pages: 200
Trim: 0 x 0
978-0-7619-8943-1 • Paperback • July 1999 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
978-0-7591-1735-8 • eBook • July 1999 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
Since 1988 Robert R. Archibald has been president and CEO of the Missouri Historical Society in St. Louis, Missouri. An active member of many professional and community organizations and author of The New Town Square: Museums and Communities in Transition (AltaMira 2004), he writes and speaks on numerous topics from history and historical practice to community building and environmental responsibility.
Chapter 1 Acknowledgments
Chapter 2 1 Facing the Past
Chapter 3 2 Remembrance
Chapter 4 3 Somewhere in Time
Chapter 5 4 Speaking with the Past
Chapter 6 5 Common Ground
Chapter 7 6 Values at the Core
Chapter 8 7 Intersections
Chapter 9 8 Friends and Colleagues
Chapter 10 9 Everybody's Business
Chapter 11 10 Facing the Future
Chapter 12 A Brief Booklist
Chapter 13 About the Author
Archibald thinks that the time has come when public history organizations will be asked to take more responsibility in facilitating methods of doing public business. The skills needed to achieve consensus must inevitably take into account those experiences in the collective past which further understanding. His book is worth reading and studying by museum staffs and historical society boards, and I would urge that they circulate a copy and discuss it....
— Lois H. McDonald
This is a provocative book by an original historian whose personal voice and reflections will...grab readers...as human beings and historians at deeper levels than most books....My basic reaction was gratitude for being invited to think in fresh ways about problems all historians face as professionals and human beings....
— David Thelen
For anyone interested in history, and especially those involved with local historical societies, museums, and archives or with the preservation of historic places and sites, A Place to Remember is a worthwhile and inspired reminder to step back fora moment to view the essential role of history in our lives and communities, how it gives meaning to the present and connects us to the future....
— Allan Kent Powell, Utah State Historical Society
Archibald's quest for a public history that can produce empathy is stimulating and important....Written for a broad audience....A thought-provoking and creative work.
— Alison Landsberg, George Mason University
This is a book that challenges public historians to think differently about their work and to define the very purpose of history as a component of civic culture. Whether we agree or disagree with his methods and conclusions, Archibald has offered a new vision for the role of history in our society....
— Barbara Franco