ABSTRACT

The Oral History Reader edited by Robert Perks and Alistair Thomson, is an international anthology of the key writings about the theory, method and use of oral history.

Arranged in five thematic sections, The Oral History Reader details issues in the theory and practice of oral history. The collection covers key debates in the postwar development of oral history including:

* problems posed by interviewing
* discussions of the politics of empowerment
* analytical strategies for interpreting memories
* concerns of archiving, practice, ethics and interpretation.

Each section contains an introduction which contextualises the selection by reviewing key isssues and relevant literature. Extensive cross-referencing and indexing provides an aid to research and a crucial comparative dimension.

This comprehensive volume illustrates similarities and differences in oral history work from around the world, with examples from North America, Britain, Australasia, Continental Europe, Latin America and Africa. It also details the subjects - such as labour history, women's history, gay and lesbian history, ethnic and indigenous people's history and disability history - to which oral history has made a significant contribution.

chapter 2|8 pages

The voice of the past

Oral history

chapter 3|9 pages

Oral history and Hard Times

A review essay

chapter 4|15 pages

Movement without aim

Methodological and theoretical problems in oral history

chapter 7|12 pages

Popular memory: theory, politics, method

Theory, politics, method

chapter 8|14 pages

Telling our stories

Feminist debates and the use of oral history

chapter |6 pages

Part II Interviewing: introduction

chapter 12|5 pages

Family life histories

A collaborative venture

chapter 13|12 pages

Interviewing the women of Phokeng

chapter 14|15 pages

Learning to listen

Interview techniques and analyses

chapter 15|11 pages

Marking absences

Holocaust testimony and history

chapter 16|17 pages

Oral history as a social movement

Reminiscence and older people

chapter 17|8 pages

Reaching across the generations

The Foxfire experience

chapter 18|10 pages

Culture and disability

The role of oral history

chapter 20|11 pages

The Gulag in memory

chapter 22|11 pages

Leprosy in India

The intervention of oral history

chapter 24|16 pages

What is social in oral history?

chapter 25|11 pages

Anzac memories: putting popular memory theory into practice in

Putting popular memory theory into practice in Australia

chapter 27|13 pages

‘That’s not what I said’

Interpretive conflict in oral narrative research

chapter 28|11 pages

Evidence, empathy and ethics: lessons from oral histories of the

Lessons from oral histories of the Klan

chapter 29|13 pages

Telling tales

Oral history and the construction of pre-Stonewall lesbian history

chapter |8 pages

Part V Making histories: introduction

chapter 32|4 pages

Perils of the transcript

chapter 33|9 pages

Reminiscence as literacy

Intersections and creative moments

chapter 35|7 pages

Presenting voices in different media

Print, radio and CD-ROM

chapter 36|11 pages

Angledool stories

Aboriginal history in hypermedia

chapter 37|16 pages

Children becoming historians

An oral history project in a primary school

chapter 38|9 pages

The exhibition that speaks for itself

Oral history and museums

chapter |3 pages

Select bibliography

chapter |4 pages

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