Project Proposal (Ikra)

St. Valentine’s Day: Origins and Evolution

Project Proposal

———————————

Problem: I am researching the origins and evolution of St. Valentine’s Day from a day about commemorating a Christian martyr to a globalizing celebration of some shared notion of “romantic love.” Valentine’s Day sacred origins go back to roughly the 5th century, and it has now evolved into a secularized holiday. As a history major at Davidson, I’m curious to know the historical development of a day commemorated for centuries and its coming to a such a massive commercialized status because in it is a fascinating tale applicable to all of our lives today. In that sense, this isn’t just a site for someone who wants to know the history of the Valentine’s Day, although it certainly is also that. In the evolution of St. Valentine’s Day, we have the tide of changing times, intellectual thought, values, and changing society. Valentine’s is a holiday consistent across the various periods of history, that bridges the past to the present, but also has embedded within it numerous changes over time. My project’s larger significance, then, is to use Valentine’s Day as a case study to tell us our own social and intellectual history.

For my sources & data, I will use mostly historical journals and other scholarly articles. I have already conducted preliminary research, through reading online articles from History.com about the history of Valentine’s Day and I have researched the library to see what books we have on it. I will soon check out from our library a 1952 book by Ruth Webb Lee entitled a History of Valentine’s.  I am going to use research librarians and our library databases to collect my information. I am familiar with how to do historical and general scholarly research because I was history major and wrote a senior thesis that required significant archival digging and researching. I am concerned about not having access to ILL, since I am not officially a Davidson student. For that, I am going to speak with our course professors and the library staff. (I may have a solution, but I will have to speak with the professor I work for who has a guest account for his research assistant to order from ILL).

Doing this project digitally presents its own fruits and challenges, some of which I have tried to delineate below.

PROS CONS
Digital Aspect: A beautifully-crafted and well-researched digital display of the history of Valentine’s Day that I can share with friends and those who may be interested in learning how the centuries have shaped our society   Humanities Aspect: I think most people don’t care about looking into why we celebrate what we celebrate, and the meaning behind certain public norms. This is case for why history matters and what it can teach us about ourselves and about the world. Of course, it’s only a small contribution through the lens of one holiday that was initially a holy-day marking St. Valentine’s death. How did we get here, and why does it matter to us humans? I hope I can at least chip away a small part at this larger life question.   The Major One: I don’t know how to use digital platforms and digital humanities is completely new for me, so I will be learning a new language in a way and using new research tools with which I am quite unfamiliar. This will become very time-intensive in the sense that I will have to first learn how to use the tool before I can even begin to get my content on there. It will likely be challenging (not necessarily a “con” in negative sense).

Social Media Networking Plan

#1) TBD due to updated information on one of my sources. Reach out to scholar Eric Schmidt (contact info to be discovered).

#2) Dr. Wertheimer (history department at Davidson College) & my former history advisor

#3) Teacher Ali Gulestan (who collects research and data on holidays, language expert)

I can reach all of these people through email and phone, and I have the contact information for all.

Set of Steps to Generate Interest:

1. Ask family and friends how I should attract them to this.

2. Write a Davidsonian Article.

3. Create a Twitter Account for my digital project & tweet throughout the year.*

4. Create an Instagram and post archival documents and quotes from my research.*

*(The ones I will invest the most time and effort into.)

I think all of these will help amass a decent following in interested readers, especially perhaps Valentine’s Day lovers like me more interested in investigating its roots.

Some Sources:

Lee, Ruth Webb. 1952. A History of Valentines. New York: Studio Publications in association with Crowell. (Main Library Stacks: 741.6 L47h)

Johnson, Robert. The Psychology of Romantic Love.

Van Dyk, Natalie. “The Reconceptualization of Valentine’s Day in the
United States: Valentine’s Day as a Phenomenon of
Popular Culture.

Fern’s First Design Thinking Workshop (Fern)

Hello World (But Most Likely No One Except Maybe Sundi, Suzanne, And A Person Who Arrived Here Accidentally),

As I close out this week and begin the next one, I want to reflect on what it was like to do “design thinking” for the first time in class on Wednesday. I was a participant in my first Design Thinking Workshop. We’ve read a lot about Digital Humanities and the debates by now, learned about different designing tools and platforms, and are diving into our own digital research endeavors now. It struck how quantity was more important than quality for the workshop because I think this tendency comes almost a little to naturally to me and is almost my weakness. I can generate ideas rapid-fire style and I don’t quickly run out. Where I often miss out is sometimes my ideas aren’t the most well thought-out or practical. Depth isn’t my forté, but breadth is (is what I’m trying to say here). In that case, it seems that this exercise in “breadth” with coming up with as many ideas as I can to a given question or problem is almost like feeding the bad egg inside my system. I’m not sure what fruits it will harbor. I do get the point of the exercise: sometimes, when we think too much, we get so caught in having good or right ideas that we never give space to considering random, spontaneous, quick thought could actually be our “strike of a lightning bolt.” Now that I’ve kept all of my sticky notes from the Design Session (or most of them), I think what would be my step #2 is to go through and refine and comb them. We already did this partially during class, but I felt rushed and think sitting with my ideas more may be helpful. Perhaps, this will my own round two of the Design Thinking Workshop: Fern’s Design Mapping Workshop. I may sit down with all the sticky notes, my class notes, and an empty wall and map things out, like a true design thinker.

Going to my last process blog, I said I really wanted to figure out how to orient myself in the class space better & get into a rhythm. Well, the getting into rhythm became rather difficult because I became immersed in a work project for another commitment of mine and everything kind took a backseat for a week (besides doing the basics and going to class). However, I have become more intentional about my class space & note-taking. I think I’ve figured that out….and here’s to renewing my goal for getting into the rhythm of things, especially all the more timely because we are getting into the meat of our course: designing our digital research projects!

Until Next Time World,

(But Most Likely No One Except Maybe Sundi, Suzanne, And That Person Who Arrived Here Accidentally)

Fern


Warning: Attempt to read property "comment_ID" on null in /home/ikrajave/test.ikrajaved.com/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 71

Warning: Attempt to read property "comment_author_email" on null in /home/ikrajave/test.ikrajaved.com/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 591

Warning: Attempt to read property "comment_post_ID" on null in /home/ikrajave/test.ikrajaved.com/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 592

Warning: Attempt to read property "comment_ID" on null in /home/ikrajave/test.ikrajaved.com/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 71

Warning: Attempt to read property "comment_author_email" on null in /home/ikrajave/test.ikrajaved.com/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 591

Warning: Attempt to read property "comment_post_ID" on null in /home/ikrajave/test.ikrajaved.com/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 592

Warning: Attempt to read property "comment_ID" on null in /home/ikrajave/test.ikrajaved.com/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 71

Warning: Attempt to read property "comment_author_email" on null in /home/ikrajave/test.ikrajaved.com/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 591

Warning: Attempt to read property "comment_post_ID" on null in /home/ikrajave/test.ikrajaved.com/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 592

Warning: Attempt to read property "comment_ID" on null in /home/ikrajave/test.ikrajaved.com/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 71

Warning: Attempt to read property "comment_author_email" on null in /home/ikrajave/test.ikrajaved.com/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 591

Warning: Attempt to read property "comment_post_ID" on null in /home/ikrajave/test.ikrajaved.com/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 592

Warning: Attempt to read property "comment_ID" on null in /home/ikrajave/test.ikrajaved.com/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 71

Warning: Attempt to read property "comment_author_email" on null in /home/ikrajave/test.ikrajaved.com/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 591

Warning: Attempt to read property "comment_post_ID" on null in /home/ikrajave/test.ikrajaved.com/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 592
css.php