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Wikipedia

Oral history

Oral history is the collection and study of historical information about individuals, families, important events, or everyday life using audiotapes, videotapes, or transcriptions of planned interviews. These interviews are conducted with people who participated in or observed past events and whose memories and perceptions of these are to be preserved as an aural record for future generations. Oral history strives to obtain information from different perspectives and most of these cannot be found in written sources. Oral history also refers to information gathered in this manner and to a written work (published or unpublished) based on such data, often preserved in archives and large libraries.[1][2][3][4] Knowledge presented by Oral History (OH) is unique in that it shares the tacit perspective, thoughts, opinions and understanding of the interviewee in its primary form.[5]

An Evergreen Protective Association volunteer recording an oral history at Greater Rosemont History Day.

The term is sometimes used in a more general sense to refer to any information about past events that witnesses told anybody else,[6][7] but professional historians usually consider this to be oral tradition. However, as the Columbia Encyclopedia[1] explains:

Primitive societies have long relied on oral tradition to preserve a record of the past in the absence of written histories. In Western society, the use of oral material goes back to the early Greek historians Herodotus and Thucydides, both of whom made extensive use of oral reports from witnesses. The modern concept of oral history was developed in the 1940s by Allan Nevins and his associates at Columbia University.

Overview

Oral history has become an international movement in historical research.[8][9] This is partly attributed to the development of information technology, which allowed a method rooted in orality to contribute to research, particularly the use of personal testimonies made in a wide variety of public settings.[9] For instance, oral historians have discovered the endless possibilities of posting data and information on the Internet, making them readily available to scholars, teachers, and average individuals.[10] This reinforced the viability of oral history since the new modes of transmission allowed history to get off archival shelves and reach the larger community.[10]

Oral historians in different countries have approached the collection, analysis, and dissemination of oral history in different modes. There are many ways of creating oral histories and carrying out the study of oral history even within individual national contexts.

According to the Columbia Encyclopedia:,[1] the accessibility of tape recorders in the 1960s and 1970s led to oral documentation of the era's movements and protests. Following this, oral history has increasingly become a respected record type. Some oral historians now also account for the subjective memories of interviewees due to the research of Italian historian Alessandro Portelli and his associates.

Oral histories are also used in many communities to document the experiences of survivors of tragedies. Following the Holocaust, there has emerged a rich tradition of oral history, particularly of Jewish survivors. The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum has an extensive archive of over 70,000 oral history interviews.[11] There are also several organizations dedicated specifically to collecting and preserving oral histories of survivors.[12][13] Oral history as a discipline has fairly low barriers to entry, so it is an act in which laypeople can readily participate. In his book Doing Oral History, Donald Ritchie wrote that "oral history has room for both the academic and the layperson. With reasonable training... anyone can conduct a useable oral history."[14] This is especially meaningful in cases like the Holocaust, where survivors may be less comfortable telling their story to a journalist than they would be to a historian or family member.

In the United States, there are several organizations dedicated to doing oral history which are not affiliated with universities or specific locations. StoryCorps is one of the most well-known of these: following the model of the Federal Writers’ Project created as part of the Works Progress Administration, StoryCorps’ mission is to record the stories of Americans from all walks of life.[15] On contrast to the scholarly tradition of oral history, StoryCorps subjects are interviewed by people they know. There are a number of StoryCorps initiatives that have targeted specific populations or problems, following in the tradition of using oral history as a method to amplify voices that might otherwise be marginalized.

The development of digital databases with their text-search tools is one of the important aspects to the technology-based oral historiography. These made it easier to collect and disseminate oral history since access to millions of documents on national and international levels can be instantaneous.[16]

Growth and development

In Europe

Great Britain and Ireland

Since the early 1970s, oral history in Britain has grown from being a method in folklore studies (see for example the work of the School of Scottish Studies in the 1950s) to becoming a key component in community histories. Oral history continues to be an important means by which non-academics can actively participate in the compilation and study of history. However, practitioners across a wide range of academic disciplines have also developed the method into a way of recording, understanding, and archiving narrated memories. Influences have included women's history and labour history.

In Britain, the Oral History Society has played a key role in facilitating and developing the use of oral history.

A more complete account of the history of oral history in Britain and Northern Ireland can be found at "Making Oral History" on the Institute of Historical Research's website.[17]

The Bureau of Military History conducted over 1700 interviews with veterans of the First World War and Irish revolutionary period in Ireland. The documentation was released for research in 2003.[18]

During 1998 and 1999, 40 BBC local radio stations recorded personal oral histories from a broad cross-section of the population for The Century Speaks series. The result was 640 half-hour radio documentaries, broadcast in the final weeks of the millennium, and one of the largest single oral history collections in Europe, the Millennium Memory Bank (MMB). The interview based recordings are held by the British Library Sound Archive in the oral history collection.[19]

In one of the largest memory project anywhere, The BBC in 2003-6 invited its audiences to send in recollections of the homefront in the Second World War. It put 47,000 of the recollections online, along with 15,000 photographs.[20]

In Italy

Alessandro Portelli is an Italian oral historian. He is known for his work which compared workers' experiences in Harlan County, Kentucky and Terni, Italy. Other oral historians have drawn on Portelli's analysis of memory, identity, and the construction of history.[21]

In post-Soviet/Eastern bloc states

Belarus

As of 2015, since the government-run historiography in modern Belarus almost fully excludes repression during the epoch when Belarus was part of the Soviet Union, only private initiatives cover the oral memories of the Belarusians. Citizens' groups in Belarus use the methods of oral history and record narrative interviews on video; the Virtual Museum of Soviet Repression in Belarus presents a full virtual museum with intense use of oral history.

Czech Republic

Czech oral history began to develop beginning in the 1980s with a focus on social movements and political activism.[citation needed] The practice of oral history and any attempts to document stories prior to this is fairly unknown.[citation needed] The practice of oral history began to take shape in the 1990s. In 2000, The Oral History Center (COH) at the Institute of Contemporary History, Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic (AV ČR) was established with the aim of "systematically support the development of oral history methodology and its application in historical research".[22]

In 2001, Post Bellum, a nonprofit organization, was established to "documents the memories of witnesses of the important historical phenomenons of the 20th century" within the Czech Republic and surrounding European countries.[23] Post Bellum works in partnership with Czech Radio and Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes. Their oral history project Memory of Nation was created in 2008 and interviews are archived online for user access. As of January 2015, the project has more than 2100 published witness accounts in several languages, with more than 24,000 pictures.

Other projects, including articles and books have been funded by the Czech Science Foundation (AV ČR) including:

  • "Students in the Period of the Fall of Communism — Life Stories" published as the book One Hundred Student Revolutions (1999) by M. Vaněk and M. Otáhal;
  • "Political Elites and Dissidents during the Period of So-called Normalization — Historical Interviews" which resulted in Victors? Vanquished (2005), a two-volume collection of 50 interviews;
  • A compilation of original interpretive essays entitled The Powerful?! or Helpless?!
  • "An Investigation into Czech Society during the 'Normalization' Era: Biographic Narratives of Workers and the Intelligentsia" and
  • A book of interpretations called Ordinary People...?! (2009).

These publications aim to demonstrate that oral history contributes to the understanding of human lives and history itself, such as the motives behind the dissidents' activities, the formation of opposition groups, communication between dissidents and state representatives and the emergence of ex-communist elites and their decision-making processes.

Oral history centers in the Czech Republic emphasize educational activities (seminars, lectures, conferences), archiving and maintaining interview collections, and providing consultations to those interested in the method.[citation needed]

In Spain

Because of repression in Francoist Spain (1939–75), the development of oral history in Spain was quite limited until the 1970s. It became well-developed in the early 1980s, and often had a focus on the Civil War years (1936–39), especially regarding the ones who lost the war and whose stories had been suppressed. At the University of Barcelona, Professor Mercedes Vilanova was a leading scholar, who combined oral history with her interest in quantification and social history. Barcelona scholars sought to integrate oral sources with traditional written sources to create mainstream, not ghettoized, historical interpretations. They sought to give a public voice to neglected groups, such as women, illiterates, political leftists, and ethnic minorities.[24] In 1887, at Universidade De Santiago de Compostela, Marc Wouters and Isaura Varela started an oral history project focused on the Spanish Civil War, exile, and migration. The project explored victims of the war and the Francoist Dictatorship and includes 2100 interviews and 800 hours of audio.

In the United States

Oral history began with a focus on national leaders in the United States,[25] but has expanded to include groups representing the entire population. In Britain, the influence of 'history from below' and interviewing people who had been 'hidden from history' was more influential. However, in both countries elite oral history has emerged as an important strand. Scientists, for example, have been covered in numerous oral history projects. Doel (2003) discusses the use of oral interviews by scholars as primary sources, He lists major oral history projects in the history of science begun after 1950. Oral histories, he concludes, can augment the biographies of scientists and help spotlight how their social origins influenced their research. Doel acknowledges the common concerns historians have regarding the validity of oral history accounts. He identifies studies that used oral histories successfully to provide critical and unique insight into otherwise obscure subjects, such as the role scientists played in shaping US policy after World War II. Interviews furthermore can provide road maps for researching archives, and can even serve as a fail-safe resource when written documents have been lost or destroyed.[26] Roger D. Launius (2003) shows the huge size and complexity of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) oral history program since 1959. NASA systematically documented its operations through oral histories. They can help to explore broader issues regarding the evolution of a major federal agency. The collection consists primarily of oral histories conducted by scholars working on books about the agency. Since 1996, however, the collection has also included oral histories of senior NASA administrators and officials, astronauts, and project managers, part of a broader project to document the lives of key agency individuals. Launius emphasizes efforts to include such less-well-known groups within the agency as the Astrobiology Program, and to collect the oral histories of women in NASA.[27]

Folklore roots and ordinary people

Contemporary oral history involves recording or transcribing eyewitness accounts of historical events. Some anthropologists started collecting recordings (at first especially of Native American folklore) on phonograph cylinders in the late 19th century. In the 1930s, the Federal Writers' Project—part of the Works Progress Administration (WPA)—sent out interviewers to collect accounts from various groups, including surviving witnesses of the Civil War, slavery, and other major historical events.[28] The Library of Congress also began recording traditional American music and folklore onto acetate discs. With the development of audio tape recordings after World War II, the task of oral historians became easier.

In 1946, David P. Boder, a professor of psychology at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago, traveled to Europe to record long interviews with "displaced persons"—most of them Holocaust survivors. Using the first device capable of capturing hours of audio—the wire recorder—Boder came back with the first recorded Holocaust testimonials and in all likelihood the first recorded oral histories of significant length.[29]

Many state and local historical societies have oral history programs. Sinclair Kopp (2002) reported on the Oregon Historical Society's program. It began in 1976 with the hiring of Charles Digregorio, who had studied at Columbia with Nevins. Thousands of sound recordings, reel-to-reel tapes, transcriptions, and radio broadcasts have made it one of the largest collections of oral history on the Pacific Coast. In addition to political figures and prominent businessmen, the Oregon Historical Society has done interviews with minorities, women, farmers, and other ordinary citizens, who have contributed extraordinary stories reflecting the state's cultural and social heritage. Hill (2004) encourages oral history projects in high school courses. She demonstrates a lesson plan that encourages the study of local community history through interviews. By studying grassroots activism and the lived experiences of its participants, her high school students came to appreciate how African Americans worked to end Jim Crow laws in the 1950s.

Mark D. Naison (2005) describes the Bronx African American History Project (BAAHP), an oral community history project developed by the Bronx County Historical Society. Its goal was to document the histories of black working- and middle-class residents of the South Bronx neighborhood of Morrisania in New York City since the 1940s.[30]

In the Middle East

The Middle East often requires oral history methods of research, mainly because of the relative lack in written and archival history and its emphasis on oral records and traditions. Furthermore, because of its population transfers, refugees and émigrés become suitable objects for oral history research.[31][32]

Syria

Katharina Lange studied the tribal histories of Syria.[33] The oral histories in this area could not be transposed into tangible, written form due to their positionalities, which Lange describes as “taking sides”. The positionality of oral history could lead to conflict and tension. The tribal histories are typically narrated by men. While histories are also told by women, they are not accepted locally as “real history”. Oral histories often detail the lives and feats of ancestors.

Genealogy is a prominent subject in the area. According to Lange, the oral historians often tell their own personalized genealogies to demonstrate their credibility, both in their social standing and their expertise in the field.

Uzbekistan

From 2003 to 2004, Professors Marianne Kamp and Russell Zanca researched agricultural collectivization in Uzbekistan in part by using oral history methodology to fill in gaps in information missing from the Central State Archive of Uzbekistan.[34] The goal of the project was to learn more about life in the 1920s and 1930s to study the impact of the Soviet Union's conquest. 20 interviews each were conducted in the Fergana valley, Tashkent, Bukhara, Khorezm, and Kashkadarya regions. Their interviews uncovered stories of famine and death that had not been widely known outside of local memory in the region.

In Asia

China

The rise of oral history is a new trend in historical studies in China that began in the late twentieth century. Some oral historians, stress the collection of eyewitness accounts of the words and deeds of important historical figures and what really happened during those important historical events, which is similar to common practice in the west, while the others focus more on important people and event, asking important figures to describe the decision making and details of important historical events. In December 2004, the Chinese Association of Oral History Studies was established. The establishment of this institution is thought to signal that the field of oral history studies in China has finally moved into a new phase of organized development.[35]

Southeast Asia

While oral tradition is an integral part of ancient Southeast Asian history, oral history is a relatively recent development. Since the 1960s, oral history has been accorded increasing attention both on institutional as well as individual levels, representing “history from above” and “history from below”.[36][37]

In Oral History and Public Memories,[38] Blackburn writes about oral history as a tool that was used “by political elites and state-run institutions to contribute to the goal of national building” in postcolonial Southeast Asian countries. Blackburn draws most of his examples of oral history as a vehicle for “history from above” from Malaysia and Singapore.

In terms of “history from below”, various oral history initiatives are being undertaken in Cambodia in an effort to record lived experiences from the rule of the Khmer Rouge regime while survivors are still living. These initiative take advantage of crowdsourced history to uncover the silences imposed on the oppressed.[39][40][41][42][43]

South Asia

Two prominent and ongoing oral history projects out of South Asia stem from time periods of ethnic violence that were decades apart: 1947 and 1984.

The 1947 Partition Archive was founded in 2010 by Guneeta Singe Bhalla, a physicist in Berkeley, California, who began conducting and recording interviews "to collect and preserve the stories of those who lived through this tumultuous time, to make sure this great human tragedy isn't forgotten". [1]

The Sikh Diaspora Project[44] was founded in 2014 by Brajesh Samarth, senior lecturer in Hindi-Urdu at Emory University in Atlanta, when he was a lecturer at Stanford University in California. The project focuses on interviews with members of the Sikh diaspora in the U.S. and Canada, including the many who migrated after the 1984 massacre of Sikhs in India.

In Oceania

Australia

Hazel de Berg began recording Australian writers, artists, musicians and others in the Arts community in 1957. She conducted nearly 1300 interviews. Together with the National Library of Australia, she was a pioneer in the field in Australia, working together for twenty-seven years.[45]

In December 1997, in response to the first recommendation of the Bringing Them Home: Report of the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families report, the Australian Government announced funding for the National Library to develop and manage an oral history project. The Bringing Them Home Oral History Project (1998–2002) collected and preserved the stories of Indigenous Australians and others involved in or affected by the child removals resulting in the Stolen Generations. Other contributors included missionaries, police and government administrators.[46]

There are now many organisations and projects all over Australia involved in recording oral histories from Australians of all ethnicities and in all walks of life.[47][48][49] Oral History Victoria support an annual Oral history award as part of the Victorian Community History Awards held annually to recognise the contributions made by Victorians in the preservation of the state's history, published during the previous year.[50]

Academia and institutions

In 1948, Allan Nevins, a Columbia University historian, established the Columbia Oral History Research Office, now known as the Columbia Center for Oral History Research,[51] with a mission of recording, transcribing, and preserving oral history interviews. The Regional Oral History Office was founded in 1954 as a division of the University of California, Berkeley's Bancroft Library.[52] In 1967, American oral historians founded the Oral History Association, and British oral historians founded the Oral History Society in 1969. In 1981, Mansel G. Blackford, a business historian at Ohio State University, argued that oral history was a useful tool to write the history of corporate mergers.[53] More recently, Harvard Business School launched the Creating Emerging Markets project, which "explores the evolution of business leadership in Africa, Asia, and Latin America throughout recent decades" through oral history. "At its core are interviews, many on video, by the School’s faculty with leaders or former leaders of firms and NGOs who have had a major impact on their societies and enterprises across three continents."[54] There are now numerous national organizations and an International Oral History Association, which hold workshops and conferences and publish newsletters and journals devoted to oral history theory and practices. Specialized collections of oral history sometimes have archives of widespread global interest; an example is the Lewis Walpole Library in Farmington, Connecticut, a department of the University Library of Yale.[55][56]

Methods

External video
  How to Record an Oral History Interview, University of Leicester[57]

Historians, folklorists, anthropologists, human geographers, sociologists, journalists, linguists, and many others employ some form of interviewing in their research. Although multi-disciplinary, oral historians have promoted common ethics and standards of practice, most importantly the attaining of the "informed consent" of those being interviewed. Usually this is achieved through a deed of gift, which also establishes copyright ownership that is critical for publication and archival preservation.

Oral historians generally prefer to ask open-ended questions and avoid leading questions that encourage people to say what they think the interviewer wants them to say. Some interviews are "life reviews", conducted with people at the end of their careers.[58] Other interviews focus on a specific period or a specific event in people's lives, such as in the case of war veterans or survivors of a hurricane.

Feldstein (2004) considers oral history to be akin to journalism, Both are committed to uncovering truths and compiling narratives about people, places, and events. Felstein says each could benefit from adopting techniques from the other. Journalism could benefit by emulating the exhaustive and nuanced research methodologies used by oral historians. The practice of oral historians could be enhanced by utilizing the more sophisticated interviewing techniques employed by journalists, in particular, the use of adversarial encounters as a tactic for obtaining information from a respondent.[59]

The first oral history archives focused on interviews with prominent politicians, diplomats, military officers, and business leaders. By the 1960s and '70s, influenced by the rise of new social history, interviewing began to be employed more often when historians investigated history from below. Whatever the field or focus of a project, oral historians attempt to record the memories of many different people when researching a given event. Interviewing a single person provides a single perspective. Individuals may misremember events or distort their account for personal reasons. By interviewing widely, oral historians seek points of agreement among many different sources, and also record the complexity of the issues. The nature of memory—both individual and community—is as much a part of the practice of oral history as are the stories collected.

Archaeology

Archaeologists sometimes conduct oral history interviews to learn more about unknown artifacts. Oral interviews can provide narratives, social meaning, and contexts for objects.[60] When describing the use of oral histories in archaeological work, Paul Mullins emphasizes the importance of using these interviews to replace “it-narratives”. It-narratives are the voices from objects themselves rather than people; according to Mullins, these lead to narratives that are often “sober, pessimistic, or even dystopian”.

Oral history interviews were used to provide context and social meaning in the Overstone excavation project in Northumberland.[61] Overstone consists of a row of four cottages. The excavation team, consisting of Jane Webster, Louise Tolson, Richard Carlton, and volunteers, found the discovered artifacts difficult to identify. The team first took the artifacts to an archaeology group, but the only person with knowledge about a found fragment recognized the fragment from a type of pot her mother had. This inspired the team to conduct group interviews volunteers who grew up in households using such objects. The team took their reference collection of artifacts to the interviews in order to trigger the memories of volunteers, revealing a “shared cultural identity”.

Legal interpretations

In 1997, the Supreme Court of Canada, in the Delgamuukw v. British Columbia trial, ruled that, in the context of "Aboriginal title" claims, oral histories were just as important as written testimony.

Writers who use oral history have often discussed its relationship to historical truth. Gilda O'Neill writes in Lost Voices, an oral history of East End hop-pickers: "I began to worry. Were the women's, and my, memories true or were they just stories? I realised that I had no 'innocent' sources of evidence - facts. I had, instead, the stories and their tellers' reasons for remembering in their own particular ways.'[62] Duncan Barrett, one of the co-authors of The Sugar Girls describes some of the perils of relying on oral history accounts: "On two occasions, it became clear that a subject was trying to mislead us about what happened – telling a self-deprecating story in one interview, and then presenting a different, and more flattering, version of events when we tried to follow it up. ... often our interviewees were keen to persuade us of a certain interpretation of the past, supporting broad, sweeping comments about historical change with specific stories from their lives."[63] Alessandro Portelli argues that oral history is valuable nevertheless: "it tells us less about events as such than about their meaning [...] the unique and precious element which oral sources force upon the historian ... is the speaker's subjectivity."[64]

Regarding the accuracy of oral history, Jean-Loup Gassend concludes in the book Autopsy of a Battle, "I found that each witness account can be broken down into two parts: 1) descriptions of events that the witness participated in directly, and 2) descriptions of events that the witness did not actually participate in, but that he heard about from other sources. The distinction between these two parts of a witness account is of the highest importance. I noted that concerning events that the witnesses participated in, the information provided was surprisingly reliable, as was confirmed by comparison with other sources. The imprecision or mistakes usually concerned numbers, ranks, and dates, the first two tending to become inflated with time. Concerning events that the witness had not participated in personally, the information was only as reliable as whatever the source of information had been (various rumors); that is to say, it was often very unreliable and I usually discarded such information."[65]

In 2006, American historian Caroline Elkins published Imperial Reckoning: The Untold Story of Britain's Gulag in Kenya, detailing the Mau Mau Uprising against British rule and its suppression by the colonial government. The work received both praise and criticism over its usage of oral testimony from Kenyans. Three years later in 2009, a group of Kenyans who had been interned in concentration camps during the rebellion by the colonial authorities filed a lawsuit against the British government.[66][67][68] The case, known as Mutua and Five Others versus the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, was heard at the High Court of Justice in London with the Honourable Justice McCombe presiding. Oral testimony detailing abuses by colonial officials, recorded by Elkins in Imperial Reckoning, was cited as evidence by the prosecution during the case, British lawyer Martyn Day and the Kenya Human Rights Commission. During the trial, over the course of discovery the FCO discovered some 300 boxes of previously undisclosed files that validated Elkins' claims in Imperial Reckoning and provided new evidence supporting the claimants' case. McCombe eventually ruled in the Kenyan claimants' favor, stressing the "substantial documentation supporting accusations of systematic abuses".[67][69]

Pros and cons

When using oral history as a source material, several caveats exist. The person being interviewed may not accurately recall factual information such as names or dates, and they may exaggerate. To avoid this, interviewers can do thorough research prior to the interview and formulate questions for the purpose of clarification. There also exists a pre-conceived notion that oral history is less reliable than written records. Written source materials are different in the execution of information, and that they may have additional sources. Oral sources identify intangibles such as atmosphere, insights into character, and clarifications to points made briefly in print. Oral history can also indicate lifestyle, dialect and terminology, and customs that may no longer be prominent. Successful oral history enhances its written counterpart.[70]

In addition, older male speakers from rural communities who have spent their whole life there and who usually did not continue education past age 14 are proportionally overrepresented in some oral history material.[71]

Transcription

Transcribing the data obtained is obviously beneficial and the intentions for future use of transcripts largely determine the way in which the interview will be transcribed. As oral history projects as a rule do not involve the employment of a professional transcriber, "aberrant" characteristics such as dialectal features and superfluous repetitions may be neutralized and eliminated so as to make transcripts more accessible to average readers who are not accustomed to such "aberrations"; that is to say, transcripts may be not completely reflective of the original, actual utterances of the interviewees.[71]

Controversies

In Guatemalan literature, I, Rigoberta Menchú (1983), brings oral history into the written form through the testimonio genre. I, Rigoberta Menchú is compiled by Venezuelan anthropologist Burgos-Debray, based on a series of interviews she conducted with Menchú. The Menchú-controversy arose when historian David Stoll took issue with Menchú's claim that “this is a story of all poor Guatemalans”.[72] In Rigoberta Menchú and the Story of All Poor Guatemalans (1999), Stoll argues that the details in Menchú's testimonio are inconsistent with his own fieldwork and interviews he conducted with other Mayas.[73] According to Guatemalan novelist and critic Arturo Arias, this controversy highlights a tension in oral history. On one hand, it presents an opportunity to convert the subaltern subject into a “speaking subject”. On the other hand, it challenges the historical profession in certifying the “factuality of her mediated discourse” as “subaltern subjects are forced to [translate across epistemological and linguistic frameworks and] use the discourse of the colonizer to express their subjectivity”.[74]

Organizations

Notable oral historians

Notable oral history projects

  • Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers' Project, 1936 to 1938, Library of Congress. A selection of first-person accounts by formerly enslaved people in the United States.
  • Civil Rights History Project, Library of Congress. A collection of interviews with people who participated in the Civil Rights struggle up through and beyond the 1960s.
  • Memory of Nations, Post Bellum. A collection of testimonies from people across Europe sharing life under totalitarian regimes in the 20th century.
  • Veterans History Project, Library of Congress. A collection of personal accounts by American veterans spanning the First World War, 1914, through the Iraq War, 2011.

See also

Resources

Ethical guidelines

  • Is Your Oral History Legal and Ethical? (2012). by the Oral History Society

Journals

  • Oral History in the UK was first published in 1972established two years before the Review.[75]
  • The Oral History Review in the USA was first published in 1974[76]

Listserves

  • H-ORALHIST is an H-Net Discussion Network established in 1996, based on an earlier listserv, OHA-L, developed by Terry Birdwhistell of the University of Kentucky.[77] It works by email and knits together an international network of researchers interested in creating and using oral history. Its daily email reach 3400 subscribers with discussions of current projects, teaching methods, and the state of historiography in the field. H-ORALHIST is especially interested in methods of teaching oral history to graduate and undergraduate students in diverse settings. H-ORALHIST publishes syllabi, outlines, handouts, bibliographies, tables of contents of journals, guides to term papers, listings of new sources, library catalogs and archives, and reports on new software, datasets, and other materials. H-ORALHIST posts announcements of conferences, fellowships, and jobs. It also carries information about new books and commissions book reviews.

References

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Further reading

  • Charlton, Thomas L.; Myers, Lois E.; Sharpless, Rebecca, eds. (2007). History of Oral History: Foundations and Methodology. AltaMira Press. ISBN 978-0-7591-0230-9.
  • Cruikshank, Julie. "Do Glaciers Listen? Local Knowledge, Colonial Encounters, & Social Imagination." UBC Press, 2005. ISBN 0-7748-1187-0.
  • Doel, Ronald E. "Oral History of American Science: a Forty-year Review." History of Science 2003 41(4): 349–378. ISSN 0073-2753
  • Feldstein, Mark. "Kissing Cousins: Journalism and Oral History." Oral History Review 2004 31(1): 1-22. ISSN 0094-0798
  • Grele, Ronald J. "Oral history" in Kelly Boyd, ed. (1999). Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing vol 2. Taylor & Francis. pp. 881–83. ISBN 9781884964336.
  • Grele, Ronald J. et al. Envelopes of Sound: The Art of Oral History Praeger Publishers, 1991
  • Hill, Iris Tillman. "Community Stories: a Curriculum for High School Students." Magazine of History 2004 18(2): 43–45. ISSN 0882-228X
  • Hoopes, James. Oral History: An Introduction for Students U of North Carolina Press, 1979.
  • Kelin, Daniel, II. To Feel as Our Ancestors Did: Collecting and Performing Oral Histories. Heinemann, 2005. 200 pp.
  • Launius, Roger D. "'We Can Lick Gravity, but Sometimes the Paperwork Is Overwhelming': NASA, Oral History, and the Contemporary Past." Oral History Review 2003 30(2): 111–128. ISSN 0094-0798
  • Leavy, Patricia (2011). Oral History: Understanding Qualitative Research. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-539509-9.
  • Merolla, D. and Turin, M. Searching for Sharing: Heritage and Multimedia in Africa Open Book Publishers, 2017. doi:10.11647/OBP.0111
  • Naison, Mark. "The Bronx African American History Project." OAH Newsletter 2005 33(3): 1, 14. ISSN 1059-1125
  • Ritchie, Donald A. Doing Oral History. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 2014.
  • Ritchie, Donald A. (2010). The Oxford Handbook of Oral History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-533955-0.
  • Sommer, Barbara W.; Quinlan, Mary Kay (2009). The Oral History Manual (2 ed.). AltaMira Press. ISBN 978-0-7591-1157-8.
  • Sinclair, Donna and Kopp, Peter. "Voices of Oregon: Twenty-five Years of Professional Oral History at the Oregon Historical Society." Oregon Historical Quarterly 2002 103(2): 250–263. ISSN 0030-4727
  • Stokes, Cynthia (2000). Like It Was: A Complete Guide to Writing Oral History. Teachers & Writers Collaborative. ISBN 978-0-915924-12-7.
  • Tomes, Nancy. "Oral History In The History Of Medicine." Journal of American History 1991 78(2): 607–617. ISSN 0021-8723
  • Vansina, Jan. Oral Tradition as History (University of Wisconsin Press, 1985), focus on Africa
  • Vilanova, Mercedes. "International Oral History," History Workshop Journal (1995) No. 39 pp. 67–70 in JSTOR; by a leader of the Oral History movement in Spain

External links

  • Food Stories - Food-related oral history recordings from the BL Sound Archive
  • Oral history collections and activities, including National Life Stories
  • Oral History of the US House of Representatives
  • US Senate Oral History Project
  • Over 600 oral histories of combat veterans, from the Witness to War Foundation (non-profit)
  • In the First Person - index of 2,500+ collections of international oral histories in English
  • Oral history in the teaching of US History
  • NYC records from Sept. 11 - includes more than 12,000 pages of oral histories as told by 503 firefighters, paramedics, and emergency medical technicians
  • Gary Greaves Oral History Digitization Project. - "The recordings all relate to post-war Seattle history and cover a diverse array of topics -- such as transportation, race relations, housing, city planning and labor."
  • Richard S. Hobbs Oral History Interviews with Revels Cayton. - "The collection consists of oral history interview recordings and partial transcripts of interviews, mostly conducted by Richard Hobbs with Revels Cayton. Interviews were used for the book The Cayton Legacy: an African American family.

World War II

  • Rosie the Riveter / World War II Home Front Oral History Project Collection of oral histories with women and men living and working on the U.S. home front during WWII Regional Oral History Office and National Park Service
  • Recollections of WWII - Directory of United Kingdom Oral History Collections Relating to WWII
  • 376th Heavy Bombardment Group Oral Histories from the Ball State University Digital Media Repository

Vietnam War

Organizations

  • H-ORALHIST is an H-Net Discussion Network (or edited Blog) established in 2006
  • Centre for Oral History and Digital Storytelling - Concordia University
  • The Australian Centre for Oral History
  • Oral History Australia (national organisation, with branches in each state)
  • Institut d'histoire du temps présent (in French)
  • Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore
  • "Creating Emerging Markets Project". Harvard Business School.

Technical

  • Oral History in the Digital Age at Michigan State University (East Lansing, Michigan)
  • Digital Omnium: Oral History, Archives and Digital Technology by Doug Boyd
  • Digital Audio and Portable Recorders: The Basics by Doug Boyd
  • General principles and best practices for oral history
  • Dédalo Project - Open software platform for management of intangible cultural heritage and oral history
  • Advice on how to conduct oral history interviewing from the East Midlands Oral History Archive
  • "Ask Doug" resource for choosing a digital audio recorder, Oral History in the Digital Age
  • Testimony software from the Australian Centre for Oral History (used in its Cultural Conversations project)
  • The manual of analogue restoration techniques by Peter Copeland is designed to aid audio engineers and audio archivists, and is available via the British Library Sound Archive
  • Doing Oral History with Vietnam War Veterans EDSITEment lesson plan

oral, history, collection, study, historical, information, about, individuals, families, important, events, everyday, life, using, audiotapes, videotapes, transcriptions, planned, interviews, these, interviews, conducted, with, people, participated, observed, . Oral history is the collection and study of historical information about individuals families important events or everyday life using audiotapes videotapes or transcriptions of planned interviews These interviews are conducted with people who participated in or observed past events and whose memories and perceptions of these are to be preserved as an aural record for future generations Oral history strives to obtain information from different perspectives and most of these cannot be found in written sources Oral history also refers to information gathered in this manner and to a written work published or unpublished based on such data often preserved in archives and large libraries 1 2 3 4 Knowledge presented by Oral History OH is unique in that it shares the tacit perspective thoughts opinions and understanding of the interviewee in its primary form 5 An Evergreen Protective Association volunteer recording an oral history at Greater Rosemont History Day The term is sometimes used in a more general sense to refer to any information about past events that witnesses told anybody else 6 7 but professional historians usually consider this to be oral tradition However as the Columbia Encyclopedia 1 explains Primitive societies have long relied on oral tradition to preserve a record of the past in the absence of written histories In Western society the use of oral material goes back to the early Greek historians Herodotus and Thucydides both of whom made extensive use of oral reports from witnesses The modern concept of oral history was developed in the 1940s by Allan Nevins and his associates at Columbia University Contents 1 Overview 2 Growth and development 2 1 In Europe 2 1 1 Great Britain and Ireland 2 2 In Italy 2 3 In post Soviet Eastern bloc states 2 3 1 Belarus 2 3 2 Czech Republic 2 4 In Spain 2 5 In the United States 2 5 1 Folklore roots and ordinary people 2 6 In the Middle East 2 6 1 Syria 2 6 2 Uzbekistan 2 7 In Asia 2 7 1 China 2 7 2 Southeast Asia 2 7 3 South Asia 2 8 In Oceania 2 8 1 Australia 3 Academia and institutions 4 Methods 5 Archaeology 6 Legal interpretations 7 Pros and cons 8 Transcription 9 Controversies 10 Organizations 11 Notable oral historians 12 Notable oral history projects 13 See also 14 Resources 14 1 Ethical guidelines 14 2 Journals 14 3 Listserves 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External links 17 1 World War II 17 2 Vietnam War 17 3 Organizations 17 4 TechnicalOverview EditOral history has become an international movement in historical research 8 9 This is partly attributed to the development of information technology which allowed a method rooted in orality to contribute to research particularly the use of personal testimonies made in a wide variety of public settings 9 For instance oral historians have discovered the endless possibilities of posting data and information on the Internet making them readily available to scholars teachers and average individuals 10 This reinforced the viability of oral history since the new modes of transmission allowed history to get off archival shelves and reach the larger community 10 Oral historians in different countries have approached the collection analysis and dissemination of oral history in different modes There are many ways of creating oral histories and carrying out the study of oral history even within individual national contexts According to the Columbia Encyclopedia 1 the accessibility of tape recorders in the 1960s and 1970s led to oral documentation of the era s movements and protests Following this oral history has increasingly become a respected record type Some oral historians now also account for the subjective memories of interviewees due to the research of Italian historian Alessandro Portelli and his associates Oral histories are also used in many communities to document the experiences of survivors of tragedies Following the Holocaust there has emerged a rich tradition of oral history particularly of Jewish survivors The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum has an extensive archive of over 70 000 oral history interviews 11 There are also several organizations dedicated specifically to collecting and preserving oral histories of survivors 12 13 Oral history as a discipline has fairly low barriers to entry so it is an act in which laypeople can readily participate In his book Doing Oral History Donald Ritchie wrote that oral history has room for both the academic and the layperson With reasonable training anyone can conduct a useable oral history 14 This is especially meaningful in cases like the Holocaust where survivors may be less comfortable telling their story to a journalist than they would be to a historian or family member In the United States there are several organizations dedicated to doing oral history which are not affiliated with universities or specific locations StoryCorps is one of the most well known of these following the model of the Federal Writers Project created as part of the Works Progress Administration StoryCorps mission is to record the stories of Americans from all walks of life 15 On contrast to the scholarly tradition of oral history StoryCorps subjects are interviewed by people they know There are a number of StoryCorps initiatives that have targeted specific populations or problems following in the tradition of using oral history as a method to amplify voices that might otherwise be marginalized The development of digital databases with their text search tools is one of the important aspects to the technology based oral historiography These made it easier to collect and disseminate oral history since access to millions of documents on national and international levels can be instantaneous 16 Growth and development EditIn Europe Edit Great Britain and Ireland Edit Since the early 1970s oral history in Britain has grown from being a method in folklore studies see for example the work of the School of Scottish Studies in the 1950s to becoming a key component in community histories Oral history continues to be an important means by which non academics can actively participate in the compilation and study of history However practitioners across a wide range of academic disciplines have also developed the method into a way of recording understanding and archiving narrated memories Influences have included women s history and labour history In Britain the Oral History Society has played a key role in facilitating and developing the use of oral history A more complete account of the history of oral history in Britain and Northern Ireland can be found at Making Oral History on the Institute of Historical Research s website 17 The Bureau of Military History conducted over 1700 interviews with veterans of the First World War and Irish revolutionary period in Ireland The documentation was released for research in 2003 18 During 1998 and 1999 40 BBC local radio stations recorded personal oral histories from a broad cross section of the population for The Century Speaks series The result was 640 half hour radio documentaries broadcast in the final weeks of the millennium and one of the largest single oral history collections in Europe the Millennium Memory Bank MMB The interview based recordings are held by the British Library Sound Archive in the oral history collection 19 In one of the largest memory project anywhere The BBC in 2003 6 invited its audiences to send in recollections of the homefront in the Second World War It put 47 000 of the recollections online along with 15 000 photographs 20 In Italy Edit Alessandro Portelli is an Italian oral historian He is known for his work which compared workers experiences in Harlan County Kentucky and Terni Italy Other oral historians have drawn on Portelli s analysis of memory identity and the construction of history 21 In post Soviet Eastern bloc states Edit Belarus Edit As of 2015 update since the government run historiography in modern Belarus almost fully excludes repression during the epoch when Belarus was part of the Soviet Union only private initiatives cover the oral memories of the Belarusians Citizens groups in Belarus use the methods of oral history and record narrative interviews on video the Virtual Museum of Soviet Repression in Belarus presents a full virtual museum with intense use of oral history Czech Republic Edit Czech oral history began to develop beginning in the 1980s with a focus on social movements and political activism citation needed The practice of oral history and any attempts to document stories prior to this is fairly unknown citation needed The practice of oral history began to take shape in the 1990s In 2000 The Oral History Center COH at the Institute of Contemporary History Academy of Sciences Czech Republic AV CR was established with the aim of systematically support the development of oral history methodology and its application in historical research 22 In 2001 Post Bellum a nonprofit organization was established to documents the memories of witnesses of the important historical phenomenons of the 20th century within the Czech Republic and surrounding European countries 23 Post Bellum works in partnership with Czech Radio and Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes Their oral history project Memory of Nation was created in 2008 and interviews are archived online for user access As of January 2015 the project has more than 2100 published witness accounts in several languages with more than 24 000 pictures Other projects including articles and books have been funded by the Czech Science Foundation AV CR including Students in the Period of the Fall of Communism Life Stories published as the book One Hundred Student Revolutions 1999 by M Vanek and M Otahal Political Elites and Dissidents during the Period of So called Normalization Historical Interviews which resulted in Victors Vanquished 2005 a two volume collection of 50 interviews A compilation of original interpretive essays entitled The Powerful or Helpless An Investigation into Czech Society during the Normalization Era Biographic Narratives of Workers and the Intelligentsia and A book of interpretations called Ordinary People 2009 These publications aim to demonstrate that oral history contributes to the understanding of human lives and history itself such as the motives behind the dissidents activities the formation of opposition groups communication between dissidents and state representatives and the emergence of ex communist elites and their decision making processes Oral history centers in the Czech Republic emphasize educational activities seminars lectures conferences archiving and maintaining interview collections and providing consultations to those interested in the method citation needed In Spain Edit Because of repression in Francoist Spain 1939 75 the development of oral history in Spain was quite limited until the 1970s It became well developed in the early 1980s and often had a focus on the Civil War years 1936 39 especially regarding the ones who lost the war and whose stories had been suppressed At the University of Barcelona Professor Mercedes Vilanova was a leading scholar who combined oral history with her interest in quantification and social history Barcelona scholars sought to integrate oral sources with traditional written sources to create mainstream not ghettoized historical interpretations They sought to give a public voice to neglected groups such as women illiterates political leftists and ethnic minorities 24 In 1887 at Universidade De Santiago de Compostela Marc Wouters and Isaura Varela started an oral history project focused on the Spanish Civil War exile and migration The project explored victims of the war and the Francoist Dictatorship and includes 2100 interviews and 800 hours of audio In the United States Edit Oral history began with a focus on national leaders in the United States 25 but has expanded to include groups representing the entire population In Britain the influence of history from below and interviewing people who had been hidden from history was more influential However in both countries elite oral history has emerged as an important strand Scientists for example have been covered in numerous oral history projects Doel 2003 discusses the use of oral interviews by scholars as primary sources He lists major oral history projects in the history of science begun after 1950 Oral histories he concludes can augment the biographies of scientists and help spotlight how their social origins influenced their research Doel acknowledges the common concerns historians have regarding the validity of oral history accounts He identifies studies that used oral histories successfully to provide critical and unique insight into otherwise obscure subjects such as the role scientists played in shaping US policy after World War II Interviews furthermore can provide road maps for researching archives and can even serve as a fail safe resource when written documents have been lost or destroyed 26 Roger D Launius 2003 shows the huge size and complexity of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA oral history program since 1959 NASA systematically documented its operations through oral histories They can help to explore broader issues regarding the evolution of a major federal agency The collection consists primarily of oral histories conducted by scholars working on books about the agency Since 1996 however the collection has also included oral histories of senior NASA administrators and officials astronauts and project managers part of a broader project to document the lives of key agency individuals Launius emphasizes efforts to include such less well known groups within the agency as the Astrobiology Program and to collect the oral histories of women in NASA 27 Folklore roots and ordinary people Edit Contemporary oral history involves recording or transcribing eyewitness accounts of historical events Some anthropologists started collecting recordings at first especially of Native American folklore on phonograph cylinders in the late 19th century In the 1930s the Federal Writers Project part of the Works Progress Administration WPA sent out interviewers to collect accounts from various groups including surviving witnesses of the Civil War slavery and other major historical events 28 The Library of Congress also began recording traditional American music and folklore onto acetate discs With the development of audio tape recordings after World War II the task of oral historians became easier In 1946 David P Boder a professor of psychology at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago traveled to Europe to record long interviews with displaced persons most of them Holocaust survivors Using the first device capable of capturing hours of audio the wire recorder Boder came back with the first recorded Holocaust testimonials and in all likelihood the first recorded oral histories of significant length 29 Many state and local historical societies have oral history programs Sinclair Kopp 2002 reported on the Oregon Historical Society s program It began in 1976 with the hiring of Charles Digregorio who had studied at Columbia with Nevins Thousands of sound recordings reel to reel tapes transcriptions and radio broadcasts have made it one of the largest collections of oral history on the Pacific Coast In addition to political figures and prominent businessmen the Oregon Historical Society has done interviews with minorities women farmers and other ordinary citizens who have contributed extraordinary stories reflecting the state s cultural and social heritage Hill 2004 encourages oral history projects in high school courses She demonstrates a lesson plan that encourages the study of local community history through interviews By studying grassroots activism and the lived experiences of its participants her high school students came to appreciate how African Americans worked to end Jim Crow laws in the 1950s Mark D Naison 2005 describes the Bronx African American History Project BAAHP an oral community history project developed by the Bronx County Historical Society Its goal was to document the histories of black working and middle class residents of the South Bronx neighborhood of Morrisania in New York City since the 1940s 30 In the Middle East Edit The Middle East often requires oral history methods of research mainly because of the relative lack in written and archival history and its emphasis on oral records and traditions Furthermore because of its population transfers refugees and emigres become suitable objects for oral history research 31 32 Syria Edit Katharina Lange studied the tribal histories of Syria 33 The oral histories in this area could not be transposed into tangible written form due to their positionalities which Lange describes as taking sides The positionality of oral history could lead to conflict and tension The tribal histories are typically narrated by men While histories are also told by women they are not accepted locally as real history Oral histories often detail the lives and feats of ancestors Genealogy is a prominent subject in the area According to Lange the oral historians often tell their own personalized genealogies to demonstrate their credibility both in their social standing and their expertise in the field Uzbekistan Edit From 2003 to 2004 Professors Marianne Kamp and Russell Zanca researched agricultural collectivization in Uzbekistan in part by using oral history methodology to fill in gaps in information missing from the Central State Archive of Uzbekistan 34 The goal of the project was to learn more about life in the 1920s and 1930s to study the impact of the Soviet Union s conquest 20 interviews each were conducted in the Fergana valley Tashkent Bukhara Khorezm and Kashkadarya regions Their interviews uncovered stories of famine and death that had not been widely known outside of local memory in the region In Asia Edit China Edit The rise of oral history is a new trend in historical studies in China that began in the late twentieth century Some oral historians stress the collection of eyewitness accounts of the words and deeds of important historical figures and what really happened during those important historical events which is similar to common practice in the west while the others focus more on important people and event asking important figures to describe the decision making and details of important historical events In December 2004 the Chinese Association of Oral History Studies was established The establishment of this institution is thought to signal that the field of oral history studies in China has finally moved into a new phase of organized development 35 Southeast Asia Edit While oral tradition is an integral part of ancient Southeast Asian history oral history is a relatively recent development Since the 1960s oral history has been accorded increasing attention both on institutional as well as individual levels representing history from above and history from below 36 37 In Oral History and Public Memories 38 Blackburn writes about oral history as a tool that was used by political elites and state run institutions to contribute to the goal of national building in postcolonial Southeast Asian countries Blackburn draws most of his examples of oral history as a vehicle for history from above from Malaysia and Singapore In terms of history from below various oral history initiatives are being undertaken in Cambodia in an effort to record lived experiences from the rule of the Khmer Rouge regime while survivors are still living These initiative take advantage of crowdsourced history to uncover the silences imposed on the oppressed 39 40 41 42 43 South Asia Edit Two prominent and ongoing oral history projects out of South Asia stem from time periods of ethnic violence that were decades apart 1947 and 1984 The 1947 Partition Archive was founded in 2010 by Guneeta Singe Bhalla a physicist in Berkeley California who began conducting and recording interviews to collect and preserve the stories of those who lived through this tumultuous time to make sure this great human tragedy isn t forgotten 1 The Sikh Diaspora Project 44 was founded in 2014 by Brajesh Samarth senior lecturer in Hindi Urdu at Emory University in Atlanta when he was a lecturer at Stanford University in California The project focuses on interviews with members of the Sikh diaspora in the U S and Canada including the many who migrated after the 1984 massacre of Sikhs in India In Oceania Edit Australia Edit Hazel de Berg began recording Australian writers artists musicians and others in the Arts community in 1957 She conducted nearly 1300 interviews Together with the National Library of Australia she was a pioneer in the field in Australia working together for twenty seven years 45 In December 1997 in response to the first recommendation of the Bringing Them Home Report of the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families report the Australian Government announced funding for the National Library to develop and manage an oral history project The Bringing Them Home Oral History Project 1998 2002 collected and preserved the stories of Indigenous Australians and others involved in or affected by the child removals resulting in the Stolen Generations Other contributors included missionaries police and government administrators 46 There are now many organisations and projects all over Australia involved in recording oral histories from Australians of all ethnicities and in all walks of life 47 48 49 Oral History Victoria support an annual Oral history award as part of the Victorian Community History Awards held annually to recognise the contributions made by Victorians in the preservation of the state s history published during the previous year 50 Academia and institutions EditIn 1948 Allan Nevins a Columbia University historian established the Columbia Oral History Research Office now known as the Columbia Center for Oral History Research 51 with a mission of recording transcribing and preserving oral history interviews The Regional Oral History Office was founded in 1954 as a division of the University of California Berkeley s Bancroft Library 52 In 1967 American oral historians founded the Oral History Association and British oral historians founded the Oral History Society in 1969 In 1981 Mansel G Blackford a business historian at Ohio State University argued that oral history was a useful tool to write the history of corporate mergers 53 More recently Harvard Business School launched the Creating Emerging Markets project which explores the evolution of business leadership in Africa Asia and Latin America throughout recent decades through oral history At its core are interviews many on video by the School s faculty with leaders or former leaders of firms and NGOs who have had a major impact on their societies and enterprises across three continents 54 There are now numerous national organizations and an International Oral History Association which hold workshops and conferences and publish newsletters and journals devoted to oral history theory and practices Specialized collections of oral history sometimes have archives of widespread global interest an example is the Lewis Walpole Library in Farmington Connecticut a department of the University Library of Yale 55 56 Methods EditExternal video How to Record an Oral History Interview University of Leicester 57 Historians folklorists anthropologists human geographers sociologists journalists linguists and many others employ some form of interviewing in their research Although multi disciplinary oral historians have promoted common ethics and standards of practice most importantly the attaining of the informed consent of those being interviewed Usually this is achieved through a deed of gift which also establishes copyright ownership that is critical for publication and archival preservation Oral historians generally prefer to ask open ended questions and avoid leading questions that encourage people to say what they think the interviewer wants them to say Some interviews are life reviews conducted with people at the end of their careers 58 Other interviews focus on a specific period or a specific event in people s lives such as in the case of war veterans or survivors of a hurricane Feldstein 2004 considers oral history to be akin to journalism Both are committed to uncovering truths and compiling narratives about people places and events Felstein says each could benefit from adopting techniques from the other Journalism could benefit by emulating the exhaustive and nuanced research methodologies used by oral historians The practice of oral historians could be enhanced by utilizing the more sophisticated interviewing techniques employed by journalists in particular the use of adversarial encounters as a tactic for obtaining information from a respondent 59 The first oral history archives focused on interviews with prominent politicians diplomats military officers and business leaders By the 1960s and 70s influenced by the rise of new social history interviewing began to be employed more often when historians investigated history from below Whatever the field or focus of a project oral historians attempt to record the memories of many different people when researching a given event Interviewing a single person provides a single perspective Individuals may misremember events or distort their account for personal reasons By interviewing widely oral historians seek points of agreement among many different sources and also record the complexity of the issues The nature of memory both individual and community is as much a part of the practice of oral history as are the stories collected Archaeology EditArchaeologists sometimes conduct oral history interviews to learn more about unknown artifacts Oral interviews can provide narratives social meaning and contexts for objects 60 When describing the use of oral histories in archaeological work Paul Mullins emphasizes the importance of using these interviews to replace it narratives It narratives are the voices from objects themselves rather than people according to Mullins these lead to narratives that are often sober pessimistic or even dystopian Oral history interviews were used to provide context and social meaning in the Overstone excavation project in Northumberland 61 Overstone consists of a row of four cottages The excavation team consisting of Jane Webster Louise Tolson Richard Carlton and volunteers found the discovered artifacts difficult to identify The team first took the artifacts to an archaeology group but the only person with knowledge about a found fragment recognized the fragment from a type of pot her mother had This inspired the team to conduct group interviews volunteers who grew up in households using such objects The team took their reference collection of artifacts to the interviews in order to trigger the memories of volunteers revealing a shared cultural identity Legal interpretations EditIn 1997 the Supreme Court of Canada in the Delgamuukw v British Columbia trial ruled that in the context of Aboriginal title claims oral histories were just as important as written testimony Writers who use oral history have often discussed its relationship to historical truth Gilda O Neill writes in Lost Voices an oral history of East End hop pickers I began to worry Were the women s and my memories true or were they just stories I realised that I had no innocent sources of evidence facts I had instead the stories and their tellers reasons for remembering in their own particular ways 62 Duncan Barrett one of the co authors of The Sugar Girls describes some of the perils of relying on oral history accounts On two occasions it became clear that a subject was trying to mislead us about what happened telling a self deprecating story in one interview and then presenting a different and more flattering version of events when we tried to follow it up often our interviewees were keen to persuade us of a certain interpretation of the past supporting broad sweeping comments about historical change with specific stories from their lives 63 Alessandro Portelli argues that oral history is valuable nevertheless it tells us less about events as such than about their meaning the unique and precious element which oral sources force upon the historian is the speaker s subjectivity 64 Regarding the accuracy of oral history Jean Loup Gassend concludes in the book Autopsy of a Battle I found that each witness account can be broken down into two parts 1 descriptions of events that the witness participated in directly and 2 descriptions of events that the witness did not actually participate in but that he heard about from other sources The distinction between these two parts of a witness account is of the highest importance I noted that concerning events that the witnesses participated in the information provided was surprisingly reliable as was confirmed by comparison with other sources The imprecision or mistakes usually concerned numbers ranks and dates the first two tending to become inflated with time Concerning events that the witness had not participated in personally the information was only as reliable as whatever the source of information had been various rumors that is to say it was often very unreliable and I usually discarded such information 65 In 2006 American historian Caroline Elkins published Imperial Reckoning The Untold Story of Britain s Gulag in Kenya detailing the Mau Mau Uprising against British rule and its suppression by the colonial government The work received both praise and criticism over its usage of oral testimony from Kenyans Three years later in 2009 a group of Kenyans who had been interned in concentration camps during the rebellion by the colonial authorities filed a lawsuit against the British government 66 67 68 The case known as Mutua and Five Others versus the Foreign and Commonwealth Office was heard at the High Court of Justice in London with the Honourable Justice McCombe presiding Oral testimony detailing abuses by colonial officials recorded by Elkins in Imperial Reckoning was cited as evidence by the prosecution during the case British lawyer Martyn Day and the Kenya Human Rights Commission During the trial over the course of discovery the FCO discovered some 300 boxes of previously undisclosed files that validated Elkins claims in Imperial Reckoning and provided new evidence supporting the claimants case McCombe eventually ruled in the Kenyan claimants favor stressing the substantial documentation supporting accusations of systematic abuses 67 69 Pros and cons EditWhen using oral history as a source material several caveats exist The person being interviewed may not accurately recall factual information such as names or dates and they may exaggerate To avoid this interviewers can do thorough research prior to the interview and formulate questions for the purpose of clarification There also exists a pre conceived notion that oral history is less reliable than written records Written source materials are different in the execution of information and that they may have additional sources Oral sources identify intangibles such as atmosphere insights into character and clarifications to points made briefly in print Oral history can also indicate lifestyle dialect and terminology and customs that may no longer be prominent Successful oral history enhances its written counterpart 70 In addition older male speakers from rural communities who have spent their whole life there and who usually did not continue education past age 14 are proportionally overrepresented in some oral history material 71 Transcription EditTranscribing the data obtained is obviously beneficial and the intentions for future use of transcripts largely determine the way in which the interview will be transcribed As oral history projects as a rule do not involve the employment of a professional transcriber aberrant characteristics such as dialectal features and superfluous repetitions may be neutralized and eliminated so as to make transcripts more accessible to average readers who are not accustomed to such aberrations that is to say transcripts may be not completely reflective of the original actual utterances of the interviewees 71 Controversies EditIn Guatemalan literature I Rigoberta Menchu 1983 brings oral history into the written form through the testimonio genre I Rigoberta Menchu is compiled by Venezuelan anthropologist Burgos Debray based on a series of interviews she conducted with Menchu The Menchu controversy arose when historian David Stoll took issue with Menchu s claim that this is a story of all poor Guatemalans 72 In Rigoberta Menchu and the Story of All Poor Guatemalans 1999 Stoll argues that the details in Menchu s testimonio are inconsistent with his own fieldwork and interviews he conducted with other Mayas 73 According to Guatemalan novelist and critic Arturo Arias this controversy highlights a tension in oral history On one hand it presents an opportunity to convert the subaltern subject into a speaking subject On the other hand it challenges the historical profession in certifying the factuality of her mediated discourse as subaltern subjects are forced to translate across epistemological and linguistic frameworks and use the discourse of the colonizer to express their subjectivity 74 Organizations EditAmerican Folklife Center Archives of African American Music and Culture Indiana University Baylor University Institute for Oral History Columbia Center for Oral History Columbia University Houston Asian American Archive Chao Center for Asian Studies Rice University Institut d histoire du temps present French National Centre for Scientific Research Louie B Nunn Center for Oral History University of Kentucky Libraries New York Public Library Community Oral History Projects Oral History Centre National Archives of Singapore Post Bellum Regional Oral History Office ROHO Bancroft Library University of California Berkeley Samuel Proctor Oral History Program University of Florida Southern Oral History Program University of North Carolina StoryCorps Veterans History Project of the Library of Congress American Folklife CenterNotable oral historians EditSvetlana Alexievich David P Boder Barry Broadfoot Tom Brokaw Alex Haley Oscar Lewis Alessandro Portelli Sang Ye Studs Terkel Wallace Terry journalist and author of oral history anthologies featuring African American war veterans and of black journalists Tong Tekong T Harry Williams Zhang XinxinNotable oral history projects EditBorn in Slavery Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers Project 1936 to 1938 Library of Congress A selection of first person accounts by formerly enslaved people in the United States Civil Rights History Project Library of Congress A collection of interviews with people who participated in the Civil Rights struggle up through and beyond the 1960s Memory of Nations Post Bellum A collection of testimonies from people across Europe sharing life under totalitarian regimes in the 20th century Veterans History Project Library of Congress A collection of personal accounts by American veterans spanning the First World War 1914 through the Iraq War 2011 See also EditCollective memory National Day of Listening Oral history preservation Oral traditionResources EditEthical guidelines Edit Is Your Oral History Legal and Ethical 2012 by the Oral History SocietyJournals Edit Oral History in the UK was first published in 1972established two years before the Review 75 The Oral History Review in the USA was first published in 1974 76 Listserves Edit H ORALHIST is an H Net Discussion Network established in 1996 based on an earlier listserv OHA L developed by Terry Birdwhistell of the University of Kentucky 77 It works by email and knits together an international network of researchers interested in creating and using oral history Its daily email reach 3400 subscribers with discussions of current projects teaching methods and the state of historiography in the field H ORALHIST is especially interested in methods of teaching oral history to graduate and undergraduate students in diverse settings H ORALHIST publishes syllabi outlines handouts bibliographies tables of contents of journals guides to term papers listings of new sources library catalogs and archives and reports on new software datasets and other materials H ORALHIST posts announcements of conferences fellowships and jobs It also carries information about new books and commissions book reviews References Edit a b c oral history n d The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia 2013 Retrieved March 12 2018 from https encyclopedia2 thefreedictionary com oral history Definition of oral history from the Online Dictionary for Library and Information Science oral history The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins oral history Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on March 22 2020 Nkala Gugulethu Shamaine David Rodreck 2015 Oral History Sources as Learning Materials A Case Study of The National University of Science and Technology Oral History Journal of South Africa 3 2 82 doi 10 25159 2309 5792 340 Definition of oral history from the Macmillan Dictionary Definition of oral history from the Cambridge Advanced Learner s Dictionary Miroslav Vanek 2013 Around the Globe Rethinking Oral History with Its Protagonists Prague Karolinum Press p 109 ISBN 9788024622262 a b Perks Robert Thomson Alistair 1998 The Oral History Reader London Psychology Press p 357 ISBN 978 0203435960 a b Ritchie Donald 2003 Doing Oral History New York Oxford University Press pp 246 ISBN 978 0195154337 Collections Search United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Search Results collections ushmm org Retrieved 2017 11 08 Oral Histories Project Holocaust Survivors The Foundation NCRA www ncra org Retrieved 2017 11 08 Oral Histories JFCS Holocaust Center of SF JFCS Holocaust Center of SF Retrieved 2017 11 08 Ritchie Donald 2002 Doing Oral History United States of America Oxford University Press StoryCorps An Oral History of America NPR org Retrieved 2017 11 08 Hesse Biber Sharlene Leavy Patricia 2010 Handbook of Emergent Methods New York The Guilford Press pp 224 ISBN 9781593851477 Making Oral History Institute of Historical Research Fearghal McGarry Too many histories The Bureau of Military History and Easter 1916 History Ireland 2011 pp 26 29 Oral history British Library Sounds Retrieved 2016 06 11 BBC WW2 People s War www bbc co uk Alessandro Portelli Oral History Master of Arts Retrieved 2022 08 11 Oral history center Ustav pro soudobe dejiny AV CR v v i Ustav pro soudobe dejiny AV CR v v i Retrieved 2018 02 22 About Post Bellum in Czech Retrieved 2018 02 22 Mercedes Vilanova The Struggle for a History without Adjectives A Note on Using Oral Sources in Spain Oral History Review 1997 24 1 pp 81 90 in JSTOR Ritchie 2010 considers Senators and other top leaders Doel Ronald E Oral History of American Science a Forty year Review History of Science 2003 41 4 349 378 Roger D Launius We Can Lick Gravity but Sometimes the Paperwork Is Overwhelming NASA Oral History and the Contemporary Past Oral History Review 2003 30 2 111 128 American Life Histories WPA Writers Project 1936 1940 Library of Congress Marziali Carl 26 October 2001 Mr Boder Vanishes This American Life Mark Naison The Bronx African American History Project OAH Newsletter 2005 33 3 1 14 Andrew Shryock Nationalism and the Genealogical Imagination Oral History and Textual Authority in Tribal Jordan U of California Press 1997 Kurt Franz The Bedouin in History or Bedouin History Nomadic Peoples 2011 11 53 Lange Katharina 2014 Producing tribal history gendered representations of genealogy and warfare in northern Syria Nomadic Peoples 18 2 36 38 doi 10 3197 np 2014 180204 Madaeva Shahnoza 2008 Spiritual trauma of the Soviet reality in Uzbekistan 1920s 1930s Anthropology of the Middle East 3 1 44 45 doi 10 3167 ame 2008 030105 Zuo Yuhe 2015 Oral history studies in contemporary China Journal of Modern Chinese History 9 2 259 274 doi 10 1080 17535654 2015 1103049 S2CID 147593017 Loh Kah Seng Dobbs Stephen Koh Ernest 2013 Oral history in Southeast Asia Memories amp Fragments Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 31167 2 Morrison James Lim Patricia Kwa Chong Guan 1998 Oral history in Southeast Asia theory and method Singapore National Archives of Singapore ISBN 978 9813055773 Hamilton Paula Shopes Linda 2008 Oral history and public memories Philadelphia Temple University Press ISBN 978 1592131419 Kirk Mimi 31 October 2016 Confronting the Cambodian Genocide Through Oral History Bloomberg com Cambodia Oral Histories and Biographies www mekong net BYU Cambodia Oral History Project Cambodian Oral Histories Cambodian Oral Histories Oral history project brings Cambodia s hidden history to life EIFL www eifl net Testimonies Cambodian Women s Oral History Project Life Stories of Survival under the Khmer Rouge Regime Delayed Justice Delayed Justice Retrieved 2018 05 03 Artists Portraits selected and introduced by Geoffrey Dutton Canberra National Library of Australia 1992 p 1 ISBN 0642105790 Bringing Them Home Oral History project National Library of Australia 10 April 2012 Retrieved 9 March 2020 Oral History Way Back When 16 January 2014 Retrieved 9 March 2020 Oral History Australia Oral History Australia Retrieved 9 March 2020 Our Projects Australian Centre for Oral History Retrieved 9 March 2020 Oral History Awards Oral History Victoria Retrieved 2020 05 31 Oral History Archives at Columbia Columbia University Libraries About the Regional Oral History Office Regional Oral History Office Blackford Mansel May 5 7 1981 The Merger Process An Inside Look by Oral History Business and Economic History 10 57 59 JSTOR 23702531 Creating Emerging Markets Harvard Business School History of the Library Lewis Walpole Library walpole library yale edu Retrieved 7 November 2017 Welcome Lewis Walpole Library walpole library yale edu Retrieved 7 November 2017 Interviewing for Research University of Leicester Retrieved March 28 2016 Sarah C Dunstan Women s International Thought in the Twentieth Century Anglo American Academy Autobiographical Reflection Oral History and Scholarly Habitus Gender amp History 33 2 July 2021 487 512 Mark Feldstein Kissing Cousins Journalism and Oral History Oral History Review 2004 31 1 1 22 Mullins Paul 2014 The rhetoric of things historical archaeology and oral history Historical Archaeology 48 1 105 106 109 doi 10 1007 BF03376922 hdl 1805 4862 S2CID 142160356 Webster Jane Tolson Louise Carlton Richard 2014 The artifact as interviewer experimenting with oral history at the Ovenstone miners cottages site Northumberland Historical Archaeology 48 1 11 19 20 doi 10 1007 BF03376916 S2CID 160431759 Gilda O Neill 2006 Lost Voices Arrow p 146 ISBN 978 0 09 949836 0 Oral History amp Creative Non Fiction Telling the Lives of the Sugar Girls History Workshop Online 11 March 2012 Retrieved 2012 03 11 Portelli Alessandro The Peculiarities of Oral History History Workshop Journal No 12 1 1981 96 107 Jean Loup Gassend February 2014 Autopsy of a Battle the Allied Liberation of the French Riviera August September 1944 Schiffer p 12 ISBN 978 0 7643 4580 7 Mau Mau uprising Kenya s Victims 2013 06 06 Retrieved 2019 10 25 a b Parry Marc 2016 08 18 Uncovering the brutal truth about the British empire Marc Parry The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2017 11 07 Letters Deaths during the Mau Mau emergency The Guardian 2010 06 18 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2019 10 25 The Mau Mau Claims Hanslope Park www leighday co uk Retrieved 2019 10 25 Pfaff E Oral History Wilson Library Bulletin May 1980 Vol 54 p568 571 a b Susanne Wagner 2004 07 22 Gender in English pronouns Myth and reality PDF Albert Ludwigs Universitat Freiburg Burgos Debray Elisabeth Menchu Rigoberta Wright Ann 2009 I Rigoberta Menchu An Indian Woman in Guatemala Second English language ed London Verso ISBN 978 1844674183 Stoll David 2008 Rigoberta Menchu and the story of all poor Guatemalans Expanded ed Boulder CO Westview ISBN 978 0813343969 Arias Arturo 2001 Authoring Ethnicized Subjects Rigoberta Menchu and the Performative Production of the Subaltern Self PMLA 116 1 75 88 JSTOR 463643 Journal The Journal of the Oral History Society Oral History Society Retrieved 4 October 2018 The Oral History Review Oral History Association Retrieved 4 October 2018 About this Network H OralHist H Net Networks h net org 2016 04 02 Retrieved 2016 06 11 Further reading EditCharlton Thomas L Myers Lois E Sharpless Rebecca eds 2007 History of Oral History Foundations and Methodology AltaMira Press ISBN 978 0 7591 0230 9 Cruikshank Julie Do Glaciers Listen Local Knowledge Colonial Encounters amp Social Imagination UBC Press 2005 ISBN 0 7748 1187 0 Doel Ronald E Oral History of American Science a Forty year Review History of Science 2003 41 4 349 378 ISSN 0073 2753 Feldstein Mark Kissing Cousins Journalism and Oral History Oral History Review 2004 31 1 1 22 ISSN 0094 0798 Grele Ronald J Oral history in Kelly Boyd ed 1999 Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing vol 2 Taylor amp Francis pp 881 83 ISBN 9781884964336 Grele Ronald J et al Envelopes of Sound The Art of Oral History Praeger Publishers 1991 Hill Iris Tillman Community Stories a Curriculum for High School Students Magazine of History 2004 18 2 43 45 ISSN 0882 228X Hoopes James Oral History An Introduction for Students U of North Carolina Press 1979 Kelin Daniel II To Feel as Our Ancestors Did Collecting and Performing Oral Histories Heinemann 2005 200 pp Launius Roger D We Can Lick Gravity but Sometimes the Paperwork Is Overwhelming NASA Oral History and the Contemporary Past Oral History Review 2003 30 2 111 128 ISSN 0094 0798 Leavy Patricia 2011 Oral History Understanding Qualitative Research Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 539509 9 Merolla D and Turin M Searching for Sharing Heritage and Multimedia in Africa Open Book Publishers 2017 doi 10 11647 OBP 0111 Naison Mark The Bronx African American History Project OAH Newsletter 2005 33 3 1 14 ISSN 1059 1125 Ritchie Donald A Doing Oral History Oxford England Oxford University Press 2014 Ritchie Donald A 2010 The Oxford Handbook of Oral History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 533955 0 Sommer Barbara W Quinlan Mary Kay 2009 The Oral History Manual 2 ed AltaMira Press ISBN 978 0 7591 1157 8 Sinclair Donna and Kopp Peter Voices of Oregon Twenty five Years of Professional Oral History at the Oregon Historical Society Oregon Historical Quarterly 2002 103 2 250 263 ISSN 0030 4727 Stokes Cynthia 2000 Like It Was A Complete Guide to Writing Oral History Teachers amp Writers Collaborative ISBN 978 0 915924 12 7 Tomes Nancy Oral History In The History Of Medicine Journal of American History 1991 78 2 607 617 ISSN 0021 8723 Vansina Jan Oral Tradition as History University of Wisconsin Press 1985 focus on Africa Vilanova Mercedes International Oral History History Workshop Journal 1995 No 39 pp 67 70 in JSTOR by a leader of the Oral History movement in SpainExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Oral history From the British Library Food Stories Food related oral history recordings from the BL Sound Archive Oral history collections and activities including National Life StoriesFrom the US Government Oral History of the US House of Representatives US Senate Oral History ProjectFrom Academia Oral History Program at University of South Florida Libraries Oral History in the Digital Age at Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan Oral History Center at University of Louisville Louisville Kentucky University at Buffalo Archives Oral History Collection from the University at Buffalo Libraries Oral History of American Music at Yale University New Haven Connecticut Over 600 oral histories of combat veterans from the Witness to War Foundation non profit In the First Person index of 2 500 collections of international oral histories in English Oral history in the teaching of US History NYC records from Sept 11 includes more than 12 000 pages of oral histories as told by 503 firefighters paramedics and emergency medical technicians Gary Greaves Oral History Digitization Project The recordings all relate to post war Seattle history and cover a diverse array of topics such as transportation race relations housing city planning and labor Richard S Hobbs Oral History Interviews with Revels Cayton The collection consists of oral history interview recordings and partial transcripts of interviews mostly conducted by Richard Hobbs with Revels Cayton Interviews were used for the book The Cayton Legacy an African American family World War II Edit Rosie the Riveter World War II Home Front Oral History Project Collection of oral histories with women and men living and working on the U S home front during WWII Regional Oral History Office and National Park Service Recollections of WWII Directory of United Kingdom Oral History Collections Relating to WWII 376th Heavy Bombardment Group Oral Histories from the Ball State University Digital Media RepositoryVietnam War Edit Vietnam War Era Veterans Oral Histories from the Ball State University Digital Media RepositoryOrganizations Edit H ORALHIST is an H Net Discussion Network or edited Blog established in 2006 Centre for Oral History and Digital Storytelling Concordia University The Australian Centre for Oral History Oral History Australia national organisation with branches in each state Oral History Association of Australia Institut d histoire du temps present in French Oral History Centre National Archives of Singapore Pritzker Military Library s Stories of Service collects and records first hand accounts from veterans and citizens involved in military efforts Creating Emerging Markets Project Harvard Business School Technical Edit Oral History in the Digital Age at Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan Digital Omnium Oral History Archives and Digital Technology by Doug Boyd Digital Audio and Portable Recorders The Basics by Doug Boyd General principles and best practices for oral history Dedalo Project Open software platform for management of intangible cultural heritage and oral history Advice on how to conduct oral history interviewing from the East Midlands Oral History Archive Ask Doug resource for choosing a digital audio recorder Oral History in the Digital Age Testimony software from the Australian Centre for Oral History used in its Cultural Conversations project The manual of analogue restoration techniques by Peter Copeland is designed to aid audio engineers and audio archivists and is available via the British Library Sound Archive OHMS enhancing Access to Oral History for Free by Doug Boyd Oral History Review Volume 40 Issue 1 Summer Fall 2013 Oxford University Press Doing Oral History with Vietnam War Veterans EDSITEment lesson plan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oral history amp oldid 1120980520, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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