I met historian Dave Tell, a University of Kansas professor and digital project developer focused on restoring historical memory, back in 2019. I’d traveled to the Mississippi Delta to cover the unveiling of a new bulletproof memorial for Emmett Till that was unveiled after previous signs had been defaced by gunfire.
Tell, who serves as a historical adviser to members of Till’s family, was an invaluable guide during my time in the Delta. He’s one of the most well-versed historians you’ll find when it comes to the story of Till’s lynching. And in his book “Remembering Emmett Till,” he exposes efforts to obscure Till’s story and use it for political, sometimes monetary, gain.
But it’s Tell’s digital work that puts him on the cutting edge. He’s part of a growing group of academics and artists who use tech, such as geotags and other augmented and virtual reality tools, to fight historical erasure. It’s an approach deployed by educators like Retha Hill at Arizona State University and Idris Brewster, who created the AR/VR history app “Kinfolk.”
Tell is the lead investigator on an initiative called the “Emmett Till Memory Project,” a digital hub of historical Till content. He co-created an app that takes users on a virtual tour of significant sites related to Till’s life — from his home, to the site where his body is believed to have been pulled from the Tallahatchie River, to the church where his mother, Mamie, put his brutalized body on display. And he helped create a 3D museum of Emmett and Mamie Till-Mobley’s life.
I was curious about the conceit behind these efforts. I had assumed that one benefit to these high-tech history projects is that their virtuality affords them some permanence: Books can be banned and curricula can be curtailed, but the internet is forever. But Tell gave me another way of thinking about these projects.
He explained that using high-tech tools to share history is ideal because the creations aren’t permanent. Works like these are ever-changing and subject to revision — living works that, unlike books, can be seamlessly updated to reflect new historical truths as they’re discovered.
He used an example from a trip he took to a school in East Berlin to make his point:
Each sixth grader would study the life of one victim of the Holocaust from the local neighborhood. The student would write the name of this Holocaust victim on a brick and the bricks would form a wall. Then the next year, the sixth graders would do it again. And over the years, these walls grew higher and higher. The names started fading. And they could have used markers that would never fade, but the school thought it was important to have the children, every year, trace the names on the faded bricks. And for me, that was a beautiful metaphor for storytelling, that says it’s fleeting and you have to keep doing it. There's no value in putting a permanent marker on there. Because if you really want to make a difference, you have people retelling the stories.
The future of Black history documentation holds a lot of potential. Now, for a few examples:
- Check out this link to learn more about the next phase Dave Tell and his team have planned for the Emmett Till Memory Project, which is slated to include 3D models of significant landmarks relevant to Emmett Till’s and Mamie Till-Mobley’s lives.
- Check out this link to learn more about AncestoriesXR, a gaming platform that uses interactive technology to re-create family histories and allows users to envision themselves living during various points in history. Here’s an example featuring the story of a Black teen who joined the Continental Army in the Revolutionary War:
- And watch the video below to learn more about Idris Brewster’s platform, Kinfolk, which he calls an “augmented reality archive of Black and brown history.”