Background

In Fall 2022, Dr. Ángela Pérez-Villa, Assistant Professor of History, and her community partner, Juliana Hafner, were awarded a Publicly Engaged Humanities Faculty Mini-Grant from the University Center for the Humanities at Western Michigan University to assist in the design of a class project that promoted the digital humanities and the involvement of WMU students and the Kalamazoo community. With the help of Alyssa Moon, Associate Director of Instructional Design and Development at WMUx and Amy Bocko, Digital Projects Librarian, Dr. Pérez-Villa developed a multimodal assignment with a community engagement component for HIST 3160 - Women in U.S. History, a course she was scheduled to teach twice a week in Spring 2023. 

Book cover of All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley's Sack, a Black Family Keepsake by Tiya Miles. The book won the U.S. National Book Award in Non-Fiction in 2021.

The idea to design an assignment specifically for HIST 3160 came after a successful community-engaged learning activity that Dr. Pérez-Villa created with Mrs. Hafner when she first taught this course in Spring 2022. The pilot activity, originally conceived as extra credit, was based on the book All That She Carried by Tiya Miles, which students had read in that class. 

Discussions about this book not only centered on students' frustrations at the lack of written sources available about enslaved Black women in the United States and the methodological challenges faced by historians who commit to reconstruct their history. They also focused on the multiple opportunities that the book generates to promote cross-racial understanding and support in communities of color around themes like family legacy, history writing, and intergenerational love. 

With this in mind, Dr. Pérez-Villa and Mrs. Hafner created a role-playing/storytelling activity to celebrate Women's History Month with the Latinx immigrant youth who attend after-school programs at El Concilio, a non-profit organization in Kalamazoo. The activity was a success as it stimulated meaningful conversations about the history of women of color in the United States as well as the youth's own stories of separation and legacy in the context of immigration and assimilation. This motivated them to collaborate again and expand their vision for a digital storytelling project called Retazos, which is underway.

In Spring 2023, Dr. Pérez-Villa assigned Tiya Miles's book again in HIST 3160 and gave us, a group of 24 students, the option to join groups that would work on different areas of a redesigned assignment that turned into this digital history project thanks to the Humanities Center's mini grant. This gave us the freedom to choose how we wanted to contribute to a big project based on our skills, interests, and time availability. Our work was both collective and individual and we're proud to share a project that highlights both the importance of preserving women's stories and nurturing community partnerships to promote the study of history. 

WMU Students who contributed to this project: Riley Augst, Koda Bostwick, Claire Burriesci, Leyla Celik, Moira Cooper, Delia Dohm, Karl Hawkins, Olivia Kamradt, Sabrina King, Chloe Kruse, Shawna Madsen, Georgia McCart, Juana Morrison, Alfaro Raphael, Ian Russel, Vriska Sasarari, Ava Sauer, Stephen Schultz, Stephanna Spann, Halle VanDeusen, Liv Wirth, Abigail Wurfel, and De'Metri Zobro-Taft.