Present-Day Plantations

Oak Alley and Whitney come from similar pasts, but their present-day uses is where they take off in different directions.  While Whitney has embraced its past as a slave plantation and is using that to educate and inform, Oak Alley hides its past in a tab that I only found on their website by googling […]

Blog Post Two

I feel the use of of now defunct plantations for the purpose of sharing and exploring the history of the United States and slavery is an incredibly good idea with a lot of potential for expressing history in an incredibly unique and realistic way. However, the way in which these two websites and plantations go […]

Blog Post 2: Plantation Museums

Generally, I’m not entirely confident that I am comfortable with plantations being reopened for tourists and visitors, let alone being called ‘museums.’ I guess it would be a proper title for what these reopened plantations are but it doesn’t necessarily sit well with me. I feel as if people go to a museum to appreciate […]

Blog Post #2 – Plantation Museums

Both the Oak Alley Plantation and Whitney Plantation have held slaves in the past, as given in their websites. Both websites have information about the plantations and its former residents, but differ greatly in the presentation of the history and services of the houses, as seen in the design of their sites.   The Oak […]

Blog Post 2

Oak Alley and Whitney plantation provide a closer, more first hand experience on slavery. Although there are slave exhibits in museums, these two plantations allow viewers to understand the circumstances that slaves experienced more clearly. The struggles and abuse slaves went through becomes more visible from these plantation museums. Both plantations have their differences, but […]

Blog Post 2

Looking at the Oak Alley website, I had to check the email link to make sure the link I clicked was actually for a museum and not a random website for an inn. Not a good first sign. As I around the website some more, it became pretty apparent that slavery is hardly mentioned at […]

Blog Post #2

Although both Oak Alley and Whitney plantation are supposed to be plantation museums, their approach in advertising their museums are completely different. The Oak Alley Plantation website, represents a family get away rather than a museum. Slavery is mentioned very few times throughout the website; which can cause the reader to question if slavery even […]

Whitney or Oak Alley – Museum or not

  From observing the Oak Alley and Whitney plantation museum websites, I think that they are different in various ways. One of the most noticeable differences is that Oak Alley’s website has more aesthetic images to attract tourists. On the other hand, Whitney’s is very plain: it has a simple webpage that includes all necessary […]

Oak Alley and Whitney Plantation

Oak Alley Plantation: It seems difficult to say that the Oak Alley plantation is a museum. There are multiple reasons for this. First of all, thee word “museum” is not visible anywhere on the home page of the website. On the top left of the page it’s clearly visible that the Oak Alley Plantation is […]

Learning From The Past

Immediately looking at the websites for the Oak Alley Plantation and Whitney Plantation, there is a stark difference in the way the two are presented. The Oak Alley Plantation appears to marketed as a vacation spot: a restaurant and an inn. On the other hand, the Whitney Plantation is presented as a learning spot, referring […]