Inception and Limits
Recreation, Recovery, Transformation
I love vanilla ice cream. Black Walnut, Butter Pecan; I love ice cream. Ice cream is what people did on Sundays. Everybody would go home after church, you would eat, and then later on the parents would take the children over there [the Royal Ice Cream Parlor] to eat ice cream.
These are the opening lines of a documentary film about the 1957 Royal Ice Cream Parlor Sit-in that occurred in Durham, NC. They resonate with me because I, too, love ice cream (although I am partial to chocolate) and when I was young, my Dad enjoyed taking our family to get ice cream at a neighborhood ice cream parlor. These types of connections between individuals – e.g., a shared love of ice cream – are referred to as “identificatory” by Kenneth Burke and theorized as the rhetorically powerful ways we express and experience our shared humanity through the particularities of our lives. These words have additional rhetorical significance because they were spoken by Virginia Williams, one of the “Royal Seven”:
On June 23, 1957, nearly three years before the famous sit-in at the Woolworth’s store in Greensboro, North Carolina, Reverend Douglas Moore, the pastor of Asbury Temple United Methodist Church in Durham, organized a protest at the Royal Ice Cream Company. Accompanied by six fellow church members, all of African American descent, Moore and his group, who came to be known as the “Royal Seven,” entered the ice cream parlor located in a building on the corner of Roxboro and Dowd streets in Durham. They sat down together and ordered ice cream in the section of the establishment posted as “whites only.” The owner called the Durham police, who arrested the seven protesters for trespassing. Ultimately, an all-white jury found them guilty and the presiding judge levied fines totaling $433.25. Though challenged all the way to the United States Supreme Court—which refused to hear the case—the charges were upheld and reaffirmed in subsequent North Carolina State Supreme Courts’ rulings (“Negroes Lose” 1958).
Sit-ins such as this one made visible the challenges and struggles faced by Black and African American citizens in their everyday activities, activities such as going out for ice cream on a Sunday afternoon. Leland Griffin, a founding scholar of rhetorical social movement studies, argued that “the inception of a social movement occurs when ‘the roots of a pre-existing sentiment, nourished by interested rhetoricians, begin to flower into public notice, or when some striking event occurs which immediately creates a host of aggressor rhetoricians and is itself sufficient to initiate a movement’” (see Gallagher, et al., pgs. 75-76). The Royal Ice Cream Parlor Sit-In and the more well known Greensboro Sit-In clearly illustrate each aspect of the inception process articulated by Griffin. The 1957 sit-in emerged from the pre-existing sentiments of frustration and injustice with Jim Crow laws that intruded on everyday life, it was nurtured by interested rhetoricians such as the Reverend Douglas Moore, and it began to flower into public notice in Durham through the Royal Ice Cream Parlor Sit-In. In turn, the Greensboro Sit-In illustrates the kind of striking event that Griffin describes as creating a host of “aggressor” rhetoricians sufficient to initiate a movement: after its inception in February 1960, sit-ins quickly spread across North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Florida and Tennessee. Indeed, by the middle of March 1960, 48 Southern cities were experiencing protests and sit-ins “over an assortment of issues concerning segregation.” (Eig, pg. 20).
Most importantly, for our purposes, the 1957 Royal Ice Cream Parlor Sit-in and the 1960 Greensboro Sit-in at the Woolworth lunch counter, provide the historical context for King’s speech at the White Rock Baptist Church in Durham, NC, a speech that marked a critical turning point for Dr. King and for the Civil Rights movement and that, in 2014, became the basis of the Virtual Martin Luther King Project. Such moments of opportunity are the inception points for kairotic action and in this case, at least according to Virginia Williams, it all began with ice cream.
Overview
Section one, Inception and Limits, introduces the theoretical underpinnings and the digital humanities vision of the project. Here, we present the vMLK historical experience as a case study for examining and assessing publicly engaged recovery scholarship. As recovery is at the heart of Black Digital Humanities scholarship, we conceptualize the inception of this project as an opportune moment of recovery. And we consider how digital humanities scholarship can be productively enhanced by exploring the limitations and consequences of such work. Additionally, we illustrate how the vMLK Project responded to and expanded the digital humanities terrain.
This section features the project assets that make up the historical experience and critical insights about the historical context. Particularly, we provide answers to key historical questions (e.g., why King’s 1960 speech was given in Durham rather than in Greensboro, since it was given in response to the start of the Greensboro Sit-in, and what the consequences of this speech were in relation to the trajectory of the civil rights movement). In this section we incorporate the Counter Histories documentary of the 1957 Royal Seven Sit-in at the Royal Ice Cream Parlor in Durham, NC and briefly examine the historical debate about whether civil rights could best be achieved through the more traditional rhetorical means of preaching, letter writing, petitioning or through the more embodied means of direct nonviolent social action such as boycotts and sit-ins. This historical contextualization involves the presentation of archival materials, including photographs that were taken at the White Rock Baptist Church on the night in 1960 when King gave his speech as well as the additional oral history of that night provided by Ms. Virginia Williams, Mary Williams and others.
Ultimately, we argue that any kind of recovery or recreation work has limits. But understanding the limitations (of both the historical and intellectual contexts as well as of the project goals and technology) and foregrounding those limits, yields a productive site for creation and critique. The vMLK project, as our example, is not an exact replica of an historical event. We can’t make that. And we do not wish to do so. Nor is it a kind of immersive project where we “drop” audiences into an experience and then invite them to draw conclusions first hand about their experience without consideration of context. Rather, through the vMLK Project we demonstrate that there is something powerful about creating an embodied sense of what it was like to be there, in the room, experiencing an historic moment of public address while also being grounded in the realities of the present. The vMLK project encourages audiences to look through King and his words to better understand and appreciate the community, the context, and the extent to which digital technologies provide affordances for crafting kairotic conditions, i.e. opportune moments for personal and civic transformation.
Opportune Moments in and with communities
A key characteristic of opportune moments is that they are ephemeral, that they are here, they matter, and they are gone. Rhetoric as a field of study and practice has long been fascinated by these fleeting moments of change and in classical rhetoric these moments were understood to be experienced primarily through public speeches or orations. Indeed, Dr. King referred to time as neutral, as something that could be used for productive or unproductive ends and he sought to use oratory to create or harness moments of opportunity productively. Such opportune moments, where an audience/public is moved with/by/through communication, are central to the way rhetoric is practiced, analyzed, and taught still today. The complication, of course, is that by studying these fleeting moments, we are always contending with echoes or traces of communicative acts. Echoes are repetitions of sound – the afterlife and consequence of a communicative act. So from the start of the project, we have been interested in sound, in both the creation of these echoes and how they live – where they reverberate, who hears them, and how they change as they echo back. Studying echoes, studying opportune moments and thereby studying the central imaginaries of rhetoric is equal parts daunting, challenging and exciting. Through the vMLK project we reimagine the practice and study of rhetoric in a digital age when the recovery of distant, lost (or stolen) echoes becomes a real possibility. 1
Our goal throughout this work is to take up the question(s) of opportune moments and their ephemerality, and to explore how and to what extent we can sustain, extend, or re-experience these moments of change in and with communities. In addition to the aspects of time, agency and positionality, understanding kairos as an opportune moment that could be recovered and reanimated through the vMLK Project thus means taking seriously digital technologies, but also community, collaboration, and place.
In terms of community and collaboration, we began with a conversation with the pastors and deacons at the White Rock Baptist Church, guided by these questions (the same questions we still consider together whenever we meet about the project): how can this collaboration be useful and of value for White Rock? What do you want this project to look like/to be? The pastors, deacons and congregants’ various answers to these questions appear throughout the six sections of our digital publication. The response featured in this section was an expressed desire for people to know what it was like then, in the early days of the movement; the desire for people today to feel what the members of the congregation and community felt on that night in 1960 when everyone was excited to have Dr. King coming to speak at a church in Durham. They wished, in other words, for a recovery of the past that could inform the present.
This expressed desire is particularly apt in relation to Susan Wells’ conceptualization of “kairotic refunctioning of the past (pg. 255).” In her discussion of Walter Benjamin’s understanding of time, Wells argues the following:
While Benjamin is deeply interested in the present moment, he emphasizes that specific elements of the past become resources only at unique historical junctures; if they are not taken up, they are lost forever. For him the present opens to a discontinuous future. Benjamin’s understanding of time is deeply relevant to contemporary rhetorical discussions of history and memory, offering theoretical tools to explain why social movements have invested in the kairotic refunctioning of the past.”
Guided by this understanding of time and public memory in relation to social movements, we sought to recreate and preserve specific elements of the past, providing for the “potential for encounter between the living and the dead” (Martha Lincoln and Bruce Lincoln, 2015). Through the vMLK Project we reach back to ignite ways of thinking grounded in a renewed regard for the past and anticipation of a future, and to thereby contribute to contemporary rhetorical and digital humanities scholarship.
Digital Humanities and Technologies of Recovery
The rise of digital humanities as an academic discipline escalated during the early 2000s and into the 2010s. Indeed, while many academic institutions and, particularly, humanities-related units, were undergoing severe budgetary and other challenges, digital humanities saw increased investment in the form of grant funding opportunities and new program development. This promise, both in terms of financial as well as scholarly interest, was invigorated by the range of humanities scholars engaging in work made possible through digital technologies.
The critical Debates in Digital Humanities series published by the University of Minnesota Press was a key example of this trend. The series worked to illustrate the critical debates that animated the field of digital humanities from a varied set of disciplines (see Gold, 2012; Berry, 2012; Burdick, Drucker, Lunenfeld, Presner, & Schnapp, 2012; Gold, 2012; Schreibman, Siemens, & Unsworth, 2008; Vanhoutte, 2013).
A common approach to early books published on digital humanities was that of practitioners’ guides. For instance, Digital Humanities in Practice (Warwick, Terras, & Nyhan, 2012), offered a range of case studies that specifically illustrated topics of concern for academics looking to develop digital humanities projects. Using Digital Humanities in the Classroom: A Practical Introduction for Teachers, Lecturers, and Students (Battershill & Ross, 2017) similarly was a practitioner guide on digital humanities, specifically focused on utilizing digital humanities in pedagogical practice similar to The Digital Humanities: A Primer for Students and Scholars (Gardiner, 2015). In SpecLab: Digital Aesthetics and Projects in Speculative Computing, Johanna Drucker (2009) took a different approach to writing about digital humanities. Her book outlined the digital humanities laboratory she co-founded. Uniquely, her book offered brief descriptions of some projects developed at SpecLab in order to demonstrate the importance of critical aesthetic principles through speculative computing. In addition to offering a set of practical considerations for students and scholars interested in speculative computing, what was particularly engaging about the book was the range of projects and theoretical development it presented.
It was into this intellectual context/conversation that the Virtual Martin Luther King (vMLK) project was first articulated in 2014-15. While many digital humanities projects were geared primarily toward academic audiences and featured approaches such as digitization of humanities-based archives/materials, historiography, speculative computing, or literary epistemology, we grounded the vMLK Project in rhetorical epistemology, digital world building, and a collaborative partnership with local communities to craft a transmedia digital project for the public (Gallagher and Renner 2023, pg. 202). Kim Gallon’s 2016 work on Black Digital Humanities and technologies of recovery was particularly productive for us during this inception period because Gallon articulated an intersection of black studies and digital humanities by way of projects that sought to restore the humanity of black people through the “recovery of lost historical and literary texts” (Gallon, pg. 44 2016).
Three themes emerged from Gallon’s conceptualization of technologies of recovery that are critical to interpreting, illuminating and assessing the vMLK Project. First, for Gallon, technologies of recovery are characterized by documenting the history and everyday experiences of African American/Black life, especially historical and literary texts that would otherwise be “lost.” Such work, for Gallon, demonstrates a commitment to the preservation and accessibility of “Black knowledge, history, experience, and education of Black People and all people.” (Gallon, Making a Case, pg. 44).
King’s 1960 Creative Protest [Fill Up the Jails] speech was one such “lost” text because, as indicated in the introduction section, despite the historical and rhetorical significance of this speech, no audio recordings have been found and the original location of the speech, White Rock Baptist Church, was torn down in 1967 to make way for the Durham Freeway. David Hill, Head of the School of Architecture at NC State and a collaborator on the vMLK production team, speaks directly to these issues, reflecting on his own experience growing up in North Carolina, knowing about the Greensboro Sit-ins but having never heard about King’s speech at White Rock .
Brief Bibliography
Bashir, S. (2022). “Composing History for the Web: Digital Reformation of Narrative Evidence.” History and Theory Vol. 61, No. 4, 19-36.
Battershill, C., & Ross, S. (2022). Using digital humanities in the classroom: a practical introduction for teachers, lecturers, and students. Bloomsbury Publishing.
Gallon, Kim. 2016. “Making a Case for the Black Digital Humanities,” Chapter 4 in Gold, Matthew K. and Klein, Lauren F. (Eds), Debates in the Digital Humanities. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Gardiner, E., & Musto, R. G. (2015). The digital humanities: A primer for students and scholars. Cambridge University Press.
Gold, Matthew K. (Ed.). (2012). Debates in the Digital Humanities. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Ingraham, Chris. (2015). “Theory in a Transdisciplinary Mode: the Rhetoric of Inquiry and Digital Humanities.” POROI Vol. 11, No. 1, 1-25.
Parry, Dave. (2012). “The Digital Humanities or a Digital Humanism.” In M.K. Gold (Ed.)
Debates in the Digital Humanities (pp. 429-437). Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Ridolfo, Jim, and William Hart-Davidson (Eds.). (2015). Rhetoric and the Digital Humanities. Chicago :
The University of Chicago Press.
VanKooten, Crystal. (2015). “Methodologies for Research in Digital Rhetoric: A Survey of an Emerging Field.” Presented at The Indiana Digital Rhetoric Symposium, April 10, 2015. Bloomington, IN.
Warwick, C., Terras, M., & Nyhan, J. (Eds.). (2012). Digital humanities in practice. Facet Publishing.
vMLK Publications
Gallagher, Victoria J., Jones, Elizabeth R., Friedman, Malaka and Rosenfeld, Cynthia P. (In press). “Enacting Equity and Ethics throughVR in the Public Speaking Classroom: The Virtual Martin Luther King Project” in Ethical Considerations of Virtual Reality in the College Classroom: Cross-Disciplinary Case Studies of Immersive Technology Implementation. Routledge.
Gallagher, V. J., & Renner, M. M. (2023). Crafting a Technology of Recovery: The Story of the Virtual Martin Luther King Project. Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies [Special Issue on Interventions in Public Memory: Interrogating the Critical/Cultural Landscape of Higher Education]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14791420.2023.2202747
Gallagher, Victoria, Tomlinson, C. and Rosenfeld, Cindy. (2022). Of Sound, Bodies, and Immersive Experience: Sonic Rhetoric and its Affordances in The Virtual Martin Luther King Project. enculturation: A Journal of Rhetoric, Writing, and Culture.
Gallagher, Victoria J., Renner, Max. M., & Glover-Rijske, Ragan. (2020). “Public Address as Embodied Experience: Using Digital Technologies to Enhance Communicative and Civic Engagement in the Communication Classroom, Communication Education, DOI: 10.1080/03634523.2020.1735642.
Gallagher, Victoria J., Renner, Max M., and Ham, Derek. (2020). “Crafting a Necessary Space: The Virtual MLK Project.” Visualizing Objects, Places, and Spaces: A Digital Project Handbook. (Duke University). Crafting A Necessary Space: The Virtual MLK Project
Gallagher, Victoria J., Zagacki, K., and Swift, J. (2020). “From ‘Dead Wrong’ to Civil Rights History: The Durham ‘Royal Seven,’ Martin Luther King’s 1960 ‘Fill Up the Jails’ Speech, and the Rhetoric ofVisibility,” in O’Rourke, S. and Pace, Lesli K. (Eds.) Like a Fire: The Rhetoric of the Civil Rights Sit Ins. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press.
Online article translating the Communication Education article for a lay audience: “Using digital technology to explore a Martin Luther King Jr. speech in the public speaking classroom,” (May 27, 2020). Communication Currents, publication of the National Communication Association: Using Digital Technology to Explore a Martin Luther King, Jr. Speech in the Public Speaking Classroom | National Communication Association