ABSTRACT

This book introduces business historians to oral history methodologies and approaches.

Using four distinct oral history case studies to explore ideas of disruption and continuity in business history over the second half of the twentieth century, Robert Crawford and Matthew Bailey demonstrate how critical engagement with oral history approaches serves to enhance and enliven business history as well as its relationship with other historical fields. The focus on disruption is used to encompass a broad set of processes such as technological change, the impact of external forces, informal business networks, social constructions of gender, knowledge transfer, firm adaptability and cultural change. The use of oral histories to interpret responses to disruption in the past, and to explore the features characterising business continuity, provides an opportunity to consider the human dimensions, subjective experiences and personal insights of workplace, firm and industry change. It also sheds light on the ways that people and firms respond to disruptive forces through innovation and adaptation – both successfully and unsuccessfully.

This succinct and accessible account is essential reading for business historians with little experience in using oral history, as well as those looking to gain deeper insights from their oral history data.

chapter |23 pages

Introduction

A Disrupted Conversation

chapter 1|21 pages

Managing Disruption

Business Change, Organisational Politics, and Work Life Balance

chapter 2|21 pages

Creating Continuity

Stakeholders, Narratives, and the Cadbury Brand

chapter 3|21 pages

Spatial Continuity

Retail ‘Town Halls’ in Post-War Australia

chapter 4|23 pages

Digital Disruption

The Advertising Industry's Uneasy Revolution

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion

Continuing the Conversation