Developing “You’re History, Pal!”: Employing Role-Playing Games as Pedagogical Instruments

Main Article Content

Ștefana Iosif

Abstract

With the present paper we aim to explore the way in which two methods of approaching history blend together and are employed in the study of socio-cultural, literary, and historical texts. We posit that the resulting approach allows students to gain superior insight into the cultural contexts explored during Text Analysis Practical Courses, on the one hand, while simultaneously developing their levels of social empathy, on the other.
The first of the two methods, Reacting to the Past (RTTP), is an innovative pedagogy pioneered by Mark C. Carnes in the 1990s, designed for university students, which enables them to explore knowledge of the past while putting on the experiential lens of a historical figure or group involved in events that have shaped the course of humanity. As such, through a variety of role playing games, the students essentially take over the classroom, with the instructor’s main objective being to guide and mediate, removing their traditional teaching hat. Within the RTTP framework, the students are provided with the necessary materials, such as workbooks, role sheets, and the like, to truly embody and inhabit the role assigned.
In our paper, we will explore the way in which RTTP lends itself to the “bottom-up” approach to history, also called “History from Below” by E. P. Thompson in the 1960s. The principal goal of the latter was to follow the social history of everyday existence and the evolution of common people, thus reducing the bias of the proverbial victor, and improving the accuracy and veracity of historical contexts. Furthermore, it employs an interdisciplinary approach, trying to avoid the reductionist and limitative isolation of material kept in separate containers, in an attempt to avoid cross-contamination, in reality achieving sterility more often than not.
Particularly within the larger framework of decolonization and postcolonialism, we can notice a reconsideration of dominant paradigms – our academic interest, thus, becomes fundamentally contiguous with multiperspectivism, as reality unfolds much like a kaleidoscope, with shifting perceptions. It is our goal to assess the abatement of bias through exposure and plurality, both within the university classroom, as well as outside it.

Article Details

How to Cite
Iosif, Ștefana. “Developing ‘You’re History, Pal!’: Employing Role-Playing Games As Pedagogical Instruments”. Linguaculture, vol. 15, no. Special Issue, Oct. 2024, pp. 159-77, doi:10.47743/lincu-2024-si-0391.
Section
Articles
Author Biography

Ștefana Iosif, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iași, Romania

Ștefana IOSIF, Ph.D., is a junior lecturer in the English Department of the Faculty of Letters (Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iași), where she teaches a variety of disciplines, ranging from advanced grammar to text analysis and interculturality. She is  a graduate of English and German, with a BA thesis on Hemingway’s short fiction (2011). In 2016, she graduated from the American Studies MA program, with a thesis dealing with Jewish-American literature. This proved to be a precursor to her PhD research, which explored the autobiographical writings of four American authors with Jewish origins (Gerda Lerner, Letty Cottin-Pogrebin, Alfred Kazin, Norman Podhoretz). Iosif publicly defended her doctoral thesis, Intersecting Identities. Explorations of the Self in Jewish-American Autobiographical Writing, in June 2021, and received a Summa cum laude distinction. She is an avid feminist and humanist, taking a special interest in social and cultural issues, while her career aspirations include specializing in teaching and researching in the fields of multiethnic literature and cultural studies.  

References

“About Reacting | Reacting to the Past.” Reacting.barnard.edu, reacting.barnard.edu/about-reacting. Accessed 8 May 2024.

“About Us.” Rethinking Schools, rethinkingschools.org/about-rethinking-schools/.

Bigelow, Bill. “The Cherokee/Seminole Removal Role Play.” Zinn Education Project, www.zinnedproject.org/materials/cherokee-seminole-removal-role-play.

“Bill Bigelow.” Zinn Education Project, www.zinnedproject.org/author-bios/bill-bigelow/.

Binnington, Ian. “Teaching with Reacting to the Past—Bringing Role-Immersion Play into the College Classroom.” The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, vol. 14, no. 4, 2015, pp. 589–92, www.jstor.org/stable/43903540. Accessed 8 May 2024.

Buchanan, Thomas C., et al. “Reacting to the Past in Australasia: From Early Adoption to COVID-19.” Australasian Journal of American Studies, vol. 39, no. 1, 2020, pp. 208–24, www.jstor.org/stable/26973008. Accessed 8 May 2024.

Carnes, Mark C. “Dewey’s ‘New Education’ and an Alternative: Reacting to the Past.” The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, vol. 14, no. 4, 2015, pp. 583–88, www.jstor.org/stable/43903539. Accessed 8 May 2024.

Dworkin, Dennis L. Cultural Marxism in Postwar Britain : History, the New Left, and the Origins of Cultural Studies. Duke University Press, 1997.

Offutt, Bill. Patriots, Loyalists, and Revolution in New York City, 1775-1776. UNC Press Books, 2022.

---. Patriots, Loyalists, and Revolution in New York City, 1775-1776. Instructor’s Guide. W.W. Norton & Company, 2015.

“Reacting to the Past: Reacting to the Past.” Barnard.edu, 2020, reacting.barnard.edu/.

“The Reacting Consortium - Games.” Reactingconsortium.org, reactingconsortium.org/games.

Zinn, Howard. A People’s History of the United States : 1492-Present. Routledge, 2013.