Layered Lives
Rhetoric and Representation in the Southern Life History Project

Download Url(s)
https://layeredlives.orgAuthor(s)
Arnold, Taylor
Rivard, Courtney
Tilton, Lauren
Language
EnglishAbstract
The Southern Life History Project, a Federal Writers' Project initiative, put unemployed writers to work during the Great Depression by capturing the stories of everyday people across the Southeast through a new form of social documentation called "life histories." Layered Lives recovers the history of the Southern Life History Project (SLHP) through an interdisciplinary approach that combines close readings of archival material with computational methods that analyze the collection at scale. The authors grapple with the challenges of what counts as social knowledge, how to accurately represent social conditions, who could produce such knowledge, and who is and is not represented. Embedded within such debates are also struggles over what counts as data, evidence, and ways of knowing. As we look to our current moment, where debates about the opportunities and limits of quantification and the nature of data continue, the problems and promises that shaped the SLHP still shape how we capture and share stories today.
Keywords
Southern Life History Project; Federal Writers' Project; life histories; interviews; Great Depression; social documentationDOI
10.21627/2022llWebshop link
https://layeredlives.orgISBN
9781503615281Publisher
Stanford University PressPublication date and place
2022Classification
History of the Americas
United States of America, USA
20th century, c 1900 to c 1999
Social and cultural history
Historical geography

