Workshop

Workshop sessions involve extensive interaction between presenters and participants around an idea or hands-on experience of a practice. These sessions may also take the form of a crafted panel, staged conversation, dialogue or debate – all involving substantial interaction with the audience. A single article (jointly authored, if appropriate) may be submitted to the journal based on a workshop session. An interactive 45 minute session which involves the audience throughout the session, and involves at least 30 minutes of audience participation.

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Moderator
Felicia Knise Ingram, Manager of Interpretation, Accessibility and Diversity, North Carolina Museum of Art, United States

A Critical Discourse Analysis of Erie Canal Heritage Communication

Workshop Presentation
Renee Barry  

This research analyzes the discourse of over 40 interpretive sites between Albany and Buffalo along the historic Erie Canalway of New York. The Erie Canal was the United States' first major infrastructure project. Like many infrastructure projects, it had both positive and negative effects on diverse peoples and environments. This reality continues today. However, diversity is not often represented in the heritage communication of the Erie Canal, nor are Erie Canal tourists a particularly diverse crowd. Using a large body of visual and textual data from over 40 museums and sites along New York state, this research explores how race as a construct implicitly shapes the historic communication of the Erie Canal. This research can help sites along the Canal, and other historic sites, to consider their choices of representation and how their choices continue to marginalize people of color. Recommendations include reframing the Erie Canal as a complex system of connections rather than a monolithic symbol of national pride.

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