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April 16, 2009 7:30pm
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June 3, 2009 - June 6, 2009
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July 28, 2008
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September 23, 2008
During the 2006-2007 academic year, Sherry Linkon and Alyssa Lenhoff coordinated a project to create an exhibit and report on how work is changing in the Mahoning Valley. "Worker Portraits: Faces of Strength" involved Youngstown State University (YSU) journalism students in writing profiles of individual workers, and CWCS affiliate Rosemary D'Apolito conducted research on demographic patterns. In April 2007, the resulting exhibit opened at the Youngstown Historical Center, featuring a dozen profiles, with beautiful photographs by Steve Cagan, and an accompanying booklet. We hope to take the exhibit on tour around the Mahoning Valley over the next two years.
With a few exceptions, the working class is absent from the mainstream media. Starting in 2007, the Center for Working-Class Studies has partnered with YSU's Journalism Program to develop opportunities for student journalists to report and write about issues facing working people. The centerpiece of that effort is a series of reporting field trips. In spring 2007, students visited Sago, West Virginia, to talk to people one year after one of the nation's most deadly mining disasters. In December, another group spent several days in the Allentown, Pennsylvania area, writing stories comparing that community's economic response to the collapse of steel with the Mahoning Valley's experience. The students' stories have appeared in the local newspaper and on local television stations.
Steel Valley Voices: An Ethnic Community Archive
The Center for Working-Class Studies, in collaboration with the History Department and Maag Library, has begun to build an archive of materials reflecting the rich ethnic history of the Mahoning Valley
From early in the 19th century through recent years, the Mahoning Valley has drawn new migrants and immigrants seeking economic opportunities and new homes. As those families settled in the area, they created the diverse cultural mix of our present day community. They brought new languages, religious traditions, recipes, viewpoints, and artistic talents to the area. Since the mid-19th century, migrants and immigrants have left their mark here in the Mahoning Valley in many ways, from the onion domes of eastern European churches to delicatessen favorites and Brier Hill pizza to the jazz and blues music of African Americans. More recent arrivals from Puerto Rico, Mexico, and various parts of Asia have added to our cultural mix, bringing new foods and new traditions. We can trace the experience of immigration and migration through family stories, preserved in letters, diaries, photographs, documents, and other materials. The memories held in these materials are of interest not only to local families but also to scholars and students who want to understand the history of immigration and migration, work, language, and the community. The goal of Steel Valley Voices is to preserve those family histories and make them available in professional archives and digital formats for online access.
The first collections included in the archive will be a set of letters, recipes, and photographs from the collected correspondence of Lucia Bisceglia Lariccia, Fiorentina Ritucci DiLallo, and Carmela Colangelo Baldelli, all materials given to Ben Lariccia, Jr. from family members. The mothers and fathers of these newly landed families began their lives in the U.S. as neighbors in Youngstown's Smoky Hollow. These materials will form the core of the Italian Heritage Collection, the first section of Steel Valley Voices.
Building the Working-Class Studies Association
The Center has played a central role in creating the new Working-Class Studies Association. In 2004-2005, we held a series of planning meetings and online discussions, and a small organizing committee developed a constitution and nominated an initial set of officers for the WCSA. These were presented at the WCSA first business meeting, held during the CWCS conference in May. As of July 2005, the first WCSA Steering Committee is in place. The association will organize future conferences, and in 2006 it took over responsibility for publishing the newsletter, two key field-building activities that the CWCS had handled for the past 10 years. The WCSA also has plans to develop an online journal and possibly a print journal, and it will develop its own website. CWCS Co-Director Sherry Linkon coordinated these efforts and served as the organization's first President. The CWCS continues to provide clerical support for the WCSA, manage its listserv, and publish its newsletter. Please visit the WCSA website for more information about the organization and how you can join.
One of the hallmarks of the CWCS is its commitment to the arts as a means of reflecting on and communicating about working-class life and culture. Since January 2004, we have sponsored several arts programs:
After the 2004 election, and given Ohio's crucial role in that election, members of the Center began to develop a series of research projects on working-class voting patterns. Using the model created by Ruy Teixeira and Joel Rogers (in their book Why the White Working Class Still Matters), Center Co-Director John Russo together with Jack Metzgar and Dorian Warren from the Chicago Center for Working-Class Studies developed a project to examine voting patterns associated with class, gender, race, and union affiliation.