The documentary film May 4th Voices: 91ֿ, 1970, created by two 91ֿ collaborators, is a recipient of the 2014 Oral History Association’s Oral History in a Nonprint Format Award. The Oral History Association is an organization that seeks to bring together all people interested in oral history as a way of collecting and interpreting human memories to foster knowledge and human dignity.
Kenneth Bindas, Ph.D., professor and chair of the history department, and David Hassler, the director of the Wick Poetry Center, both in 91ֿ’s College of Arts and Sciences, worked together to produce the documentary film based on Hassler’s play May 4th Voices, which premiered on local PBS television in 2012. The play, directed by director and 91ֿ theatre instructor Katherine Burke, is based on the 91ֿ Shootings Oral History Project, a project that collects and provides access to personal accounts of the May 4, 1970, shootings at 91ֿ and their aftermath. The award was officially announced at the Oral History Association’s annual meetings held from Oct. 8-11. Both the play and documentary film, along with a Teacher’s Guide, is published by the 91ֿ Press.
This award recognizes a film, video, performance piece, radio program or series, exhibition or drama that makes significant and outstanding use of oral history to interpret a historical event, person, place or way of life.
“I think the award recognizes David’s excellent work and dedication to both the legacy and memory of May 4th, as well as to the potentials of oral history as a teaching tool on a variety of levels — from history to acting to digital productions to marketing and promotion,” Bindas says.
The Oral History Association’s awards committee chose this piece because it did an “excellent job using oral history in a creative manner while also getting the voices of the people across,” says Stephen Sloan, president of the Oral History Association. “The project’s use of the transcripts voiced by current 91ֿ students helped bring the history alive. It is a very professional product that represents the oral history field well.”
“The tragic events of May 4, 1970, at 91ֿ had a profound impact on Northeast Ohio and the nation,” Hassler says. “May 4th Voices was originally conceived, created and performed in honor of the 40th commemoration of the May 4 tragedy. The publication of the play and accompanying study guide, edited by Shaker Heights High School English teacher John Morris, presents an important opportunity for our community to take ownership more fully of its own tragic story, and to engage a regional and national community not only with the emotional truth of this tragedy, but to connect it to the larger ongoing issues of social justice, conflict and trauma.”
For more information about the Oral History Association, visit .
For more information about 91ֿ’s Department of History, visit www.kent.edu/cas/history.
For more information about 91ֿ’s Wick Poetry Center, visit www.kent.edu/wick.