Advertisement

Institute Will Help Scholars Mine Golden State's History

The Huntington Library and USC team up to promote the study of California, the West and their place in the world.

Los Angeles

July 19, 2004|Jia-Rui Chong, Times Staff Writer

A new institute aimed at encouraging scholars and working professionals to study the history of and influences on California and the West will be launched today by the Huntington Library and USC.

"In the last 20 years, there has been a resurgence of interest in the American West," said Bill Deverell, director of the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West and a professor of history at USC. "There is the notion that California and the West are bellwethers for the rest of the nation, if not the globe."

For The Record
Los Angeles Times Tuesday July 20, 2004 Home Edition Main News Part A Page 2 National Desk 2 inches; 74 words Type of Material: Correction
Huntington Library photo -- One of two photographs that accompanied an article in Monday's California section about a new institute established by the Huntington Library and USC to study the history of California and the West was published in error. The picture, showing Claremont Colleges religion professor Lori Anne Ferrell and Huntington curator Stephen Tabor with rare Bibles, illustrates a separate program at the Huntington and is not connected to the California history project.

Advertisement

Institute officials plan to hold classes and seminars at USC and the Huntington Library, as well as promote better use of the library's extensive archives that include hand-drawn maps of Mission holdings, Army records and photographs recording the growth of Southern California.

The institute hopes to expand perceptions of Californians beyond such pop-culture standards as "Gidget" or "Beverly Hills 90210," said Robert C. Ritchie, the library's director of research.

" 'Baywatch,' for a while, was the No. 1 television show in the world. That was California," he said. "Well, a lot goes on in San Bernardino too."

The institute's backers say academics have tended to treat California with a touch of snobbery -- and lack of attention -- because the state is relatively young. But the nation's most populous state has grown to play a hefty role in the international economy, spurred civics lessons across the country with last year's gubernatorial recall election, and illustrates the frictions and benefits of so many cultures living together, they said.

"Every field evolves," said Ritchie. California is now "a powerful state in its own right."

The first sponsored symposium will be a panel discussion on "What Does California Mean?" It will take place in April at the Organization of American Historians meeting in San Francisco.

Steven Koblik, the Huntington Library's president, said the new institute hoped to become the premier authority on California and the West -- outpacing institutions such as the Bancroft Library at UC Berkeley and the Beinecke Library at Yale, which offer considerable research material on the region.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|
|
|