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Full Description
The Bloomsbury Handbook of Oral History is a comprehensive examination of oral history which addresses a wide range of practitioners, from beginning students to graduate students and established scholars, community and freelance practitioners in the field, and those from other fields and disciplines interested in oral history. The purpose of the book is to provide a broad range of readers with:
* An advanced introduction into and overview of the field;
* Cutting-edge reflections on core themes in the field; and
* Global comparative perspectives on oral history theory and practice
The Handbook is arranged in five thematic Parts: Creating Interviews, Interpreting Oral Histories, Making Histories, Advocacy & Empowerment, and Big Questions & Future Directions. Each chapter documents the state-of-the-art in a particular subject area and surveys the international historiography and current debates. Each chapter concludes with a brief outlook of potential future developments in the field.
With chapter authors from every region of the oral history world - North America, South America, Oceania, Africa, Asia and Europe - and each author making use of examples and scholarship from across the global field of oral history, this volume represents the first truly international handbook of oral history.
Contents
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS viii
LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS ix
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xvii
Introduction 1
Alexander Freund, Erin Jessee, and Alistair Thomson
PART 1 CREATING INTERVIEWS
Introduction 13
1 Oral History and the Interview 25
Amy Starecheski
2 The Interviewee's Experience of Oral History 41
Anna Sheftel
3 Designing Ethical Oral History Projects and Partnerships 57
Carla Pascoe Leahy
4 The Oral History Relationship: Interviewing Latin American Activists 73
Pablo Pozzi
5 The Anxieties of Oral History Dialogues 89
Sean Field
PART 2 INTERPRETING ORAL HISTORIES
Introduction 107
6 Oral History as Evidence: Multidisciplinary Approaches 119
Anna Green
7 Voice, Emotion, Language, Narrative, Body: Analyzing Meaning in Oral
History 137
Lindsey Dodd
8 Oral History as Data: Multimodal Approaches to Analysis and
Interpretation 153
Andrew Flinn, Julianne Nyhan, and Hannah Smyth
9 When Relationships and Stories Guide Our Practice: Subjectivities,
Intersubjectivities, and Intersectionality in Oral History 171
Katrina Srigley
10 Negotiating Interpretative Conflict in Oral History 193
Ricardo Santhiago
PART 3 MAKING HISTORIES
Introduction 209
11 Writing Oral History 219
Alistair Thomson
12 Oral History and Creative Writing 237
Ariella Van Luyn
13 Listening for Place: Curating Landscape with Oral History 255
Mark Tebeau
14 Making Audiovisual Histories: Oral History in Disguise 271
Nairy AbdElShafy
15 Oral History Performance 289
Clare Summerskill
PART 4 ADVOCACY AND EMPOWERMENT
Introduction 305
16 Listening for Change: Oral History, Policy, and Professional Practice 313
Alison Chand
17 Crisis Oral History: Methodology, Ethics, and Pedagogy 329
Hourig Attarian, Erin Jessee, Kathryn Nasstrom, and Monica
Eileen Patterson
18 Testimony and Transitional Justice: Speaking, Truth, and Power 345
Anna Bryson and Julia Volkmar
19 Teaching with Oral History: Reckoning with Stories of the Past 365
Kristina R. Llewellyn, Nicholas Ng-A-Fook, Marina Bantiou, Patrick
Phillips, and Kiera Brant-Birioukov
PART 5 CURRENT CHALLENGES AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS
Introduction 383
20 I Am the Voice of My Ancestors: Defining Oral History on
Indigenous Terms 393
Nepia Mahuika
21 Oral History and our Planetary Future 409
Andrea Gaynor and Meera Anna Oommen
22 Monitoring the Self: Oral History in an Age of Autobiography
and Surveillance 425
Alexander Freund
23 AI and Oral History: Anticipating Oral History's Fifth Paradigm 443
Douglas A. Boyd
Epilogue: Oral History in Troubling Times 459
Alexander Freund, Erin Jessee, and Alistair Thomson
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 463
INDEX 467



