Storytelling to Preserve a Community’s History

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18060/26104

Abstract

Storytelling has the power to send a message, preserve culture, history, and influence change. As CRISP Fellows, we visited long-term and new residents to capture their stories, memories, and reflections about the neighborhood history and the recent changes and trends that have impacted the Martindale Brightwood. As graduate students, we learned that community-based participatory research (CBPR) can teach students to make policy decisions that are sustainable and create academic research that is impactful. 

Author Biographies

Desmond L. Kemp, IUPUI

Desmond L. Kemp is a doctoral candidate in the American Studies program. 

Latosha Rowley

Latosha Rowley is a doctoral candidate at IUPUI in the Urban Education Studies program. 

Stacia Murphy

Stacia Murphy is a doctoral candidate in the American Studies program. 

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Published

2022-06-22

Issue

Section

Community-Engaged Research Articles