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Oral Histories
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What is oral history? Recorded interviews of spoken memories and personal commentaries of historical significance Dialogue between interviewer and interviewee – a product of both people Formats: audiorecording, video, or transcripts
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Challenges of using oral histories Conversations are nonlinear, there may be false starts, dead ends, rambling Oral history is a mixture of fact and opinion, are inherently subjective and individualistic and reflect personal biases Need to balance oral history with other evidence
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Memory & oral history Oral history is based on memory Memory is fallible Memory erodes over time Memories are selective Memories are condensed over time Memories produce a jigsaw of the past, not necessarily and organized, coherent version
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Strengths of oral history Voice of the common person Provided sense of the times, a direct life experience Provide information that isn’t available in other historic sources Provides a personal angle on historical events
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Evaluating oral history Who is saying what, to whom, for what purpose, and under what circumstances Interviewee/narrator Interviewer Content of interview Purpose of interview Location of interview
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Sources of Oral history UW Libraries Catalog (interviews or oral history) and world war 1914 Imperial War Museum http://www.iwmcollections.org.uk/ Veteran’s History Project http://www.loc.gov/vets/
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Other Types of Sources Records Enlistment forms http://www.collectionscanada.ca/02/020106_e. html http://www.collectionscanada.ca/02/020106_e. html Questionnaires http://ajax.lva.lib.va.us/F/?func=file&file_name =find-b-clas13&local_base=CLAS13 http://ajax.lva.lib.va.us/F/?func=file&file_name =find-b-clas13&local_base=CLAS13
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