Mary Marshall Clark - Incite at Columbia University

  • Mary Marshall Clark

    (Director, Columbia Center for Oral History Research)

  • Contact mmc17@columbia.edu

Mary Marshall Clark is the Director of the Columbia University Center for Oral History Research.

She is co-founding director of Columbia’s Master of Arts degree in Oral History. Mary Marshall has been involved with the oral history movement since 1991 and was president of the United States Oral History Association in 2001-2002. She was the co-principal investigator of the September 11, 2001 Oral History Narrative and Memory Project, a longitudinal oral history project totaling over 1,000 hours of eyewitness testimony taken in New York City’s diverse populations.

She worked with colleagues to supervise and develop the Telling Lives Curriculum Project, in which diverse youth in Chinatown were taught oral history skills to interpret the consequences of 9/11 in their communities and families. Mary Marshall was a co-principal investigator and interviewer on The Obama Presidency Oral History Project, focusing on the leadership of Michelle Obama. She was also co-principal investigator on the Baldwin-Emerson Elders Project.

In 2009, Mary Marshall founded and directed a comprehensive oral history project, Guantanamo and the Rule of Law, in which over 350 hours were collected on legal, moral, and ethical issues surrounding the use of the prison as a site of detention and torture. Mary Marshall has completed longitudinal oral history projects on the Carnegie Corporation and the Atlantic Philanthropies. She has directed projects on the Council of Foreign Relations, the Harriman Institute, and Columbia's history of feminist thought and inquiry. Most recently, she co-directed an extensive project on the Human Rights Campaign, an advocacy organization for LGBTQ rights. Mary Marshall was lead editor of After the Fall: New Yorkers Remember September 11, 2001, and the Years That Followed (The New Press, 2011); a co-editor of Robert Rauschenberg: An Oral History (Columbia University Press, 2019); and co-authored the human rights publication Documenting and Interpreting Conflict: A Working Guide. She is also editor of the Columbia University Oral History Press Series.

Mary Marshall is the 2012 recipient of the Distinguished Alumna Award from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for contributions to public history and the 2017 Forrest C. Pogue Award for contributions to oral history. She is a Distinguished Lecturer with the Organization of American Historians and lectures and gives public workshops.

Projects

  • go to Aryeh Neier Oral History
    Aryeh Neier Oral History
    Exploring the life, influence, and legacy of a prolific human rights activist. Funded by Open Society Foundations
  • go to Carnegie Corporation of New York Oral History
    Carnegie Corporation of New York Oral History
    Documenting the growth of American philanthropy through the institutional memories of a leading grant-making organization. In partnership with Carnegie Corporation of New York
  • go to Facing Whiteness
    Facing Whiteness
    Exploring how Americans who identify as white understand their own racial and ethnic identities. Funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and Chicago Media Project
  • go to Human Rights Campaign Oral History
    Human Rights Campaign Oral History
    Funded by Human Rights Campaign
  • go to Institute for Research on Women, Gender and Sexuality Oral History
    Institute for Research on Women, Gender and Sexuality Oral History
    Detailing the history of feminism at Columbia University through the memories of an historic organization. Funded by Columbia University's Office of the President
  • go to NYC Covid-19 Oral History, Narrative, and Memory Project
    NYC Covid-19 Oral History, Narrative, and Memory Project
    Documenting New York City’s experience of the Covid-19 pandemic. Funded by the National Science Foundation and the Board of Trustees of the American Assembly
  • go to Obama Presidency Oral History
    Obama Presidency Oral History
    Creating a comprehensive oral history of the Obama years with over 450 officials, activists, organizers, and extraordinary people from all walks of life. Funded by Columbia University's Office of the President
  • go to Phoenix House Oral History
    Phoenix House Oral History
    Capturing the story of how Phoenix House transformed drug rehabilitation in America. Funded by Phoenix House Foundation
  • go to Robert Rauschenberg Oral History
    Robert Rauschenberg Oral History
    Documenting the American avant-garde movement and the conditions that enabled it through the life and work of one of its most renowned artists. Funded by the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation
  • go to September 11, 2001 Oral Histories
    September 11, 2001 Oral Histories
    Capturing a comprehensive, longitudinal memory of responses to the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Funded by the National Science Foundation, Rockefeller Fund, and Columbia University
  • go to The Elders Project
    The Elders Project
    Capturing the stories of elders who have shaped America—from Civil Rights activists to tribal leaders to survivors of Stonewall—before they’re lost to history. Funded by Emerson Collective

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