Livre - The oral History Reader

901 PER

Description

Livre

Routledge

Perks Robert

Thomson Alistair

Presentation materielle : 1 vol. (XX-719 p.)

Dimensions : 24 cm

List of figures, p. XI Acknowledgements, p. XII Introduction to the third edition, p. XIII PART I Critical developments: introduction, p. 1 1 BLACK HISTORY, ORAL HISTORY AND GENEALOGY, p. 22 2 THE VOICE OF THE PAST: ORAL HISTORY, p. 33 3 ORAL HISTORY AND HARD TIMES: A REVIEW ESSAY, p. 40 4 WHAT MAKES ORAL HISTORY DIFFERENT, p. 48 5 POLITICS AND PRAXIS IN CANADIAN WORKING-CLASS ORAL HISTORY, p. 59 6 ‘LISTENING IN THE COLD’: THE PRACTICE OF ORAL HISTORY IN AN ARGENTINE WORKING-CLASS COMMUNITY, p. 73 7 WHAT REMAINS: REFLECTIONS ON CRISIS ORAL HISTORY, p. 92 8 ORAL HISTORY AND THE SENSES, p. 104 9 ‘I JUST WANT TO CLICK ON IT TO LISTEN’: ORAL HISTORY ARCHIVES, ORALITY AND USABILITY, p. 117 PART II Interviewing, p. 135 10 INTERVIEWING AN INTERVIEWER, p. 147 11 INTERVIEWING TECHNIQUES AND STRATEGIES, p. 153 12 LEARNING TO LISTEN: INTERVIEW TECHNIQUES AND ANALYSES, p. 179 13 REMEMBERING IN GROUPS: NEGOTIATING BETWEEN ‘INDIVIDUAL’ AND ‘COLLECTIVE’ MEMORIES, p. 193 14 INTERVIEWING THE WOMEN OF PHOKENG: CONSCIOUSNESS AND GENDER, INSIDER AND OUTSIDER, p. 212 15 ISSUES IN CROSS-CULTURAL INTERVIEWING: JAPANESE WOMEN IN ENGLAND, p. 223 16 RETICENCE IN ORAL HISTORY INTERVIEWS, p. 234 17 TOWARD AN ETHICS OF SILENCE? NEGOTIATING OFF-THE-RECORD EVENTS AND IDENTITY IN ORAL HISTORY, p. 253 18 IMAGING FAMILY MEMORIES: MY MUM, HER PHOTOGRAPHS, OUR MEMORIES, p. 567 19 INTERVIEWING IN BUSINESS AND CORPORATE ENVIRONMENTS: BENEFITS AND CHALLENGES, p. 281 PART III Interpreting memories, p. 297 20 REMEMBERING SURVIVAL: INSIDE A NAZI SLAVE-LABOR CAMP, p. 311 21 SURVIVING MEMORY: TRUTH AND INACCURACY IN HOLOCAUST TESTIMONY, p. 320 22 REMEMBERING A VIETNAM WAR FIREFIGHT: CHANGING PERSPECTIVES OVER TIME, p. 334 23 ANZAC MEMORIES: PUTTING POPULAR MEMORY THEORY INTO PRACTICE IN AUSTRALIA, p. 343 24 PRIVATE LIFE IN STALIN’S RUSSIA: NARRATIVES, MEMORY AND ORAL HISTORY, p. 354 25 MEMORY WORK IN JAVA: A CAUTIONARY TALE, p. 370 26 SEX, ‘SILENCE’ AND AUDIOTAPE: LISTENING FOR FEMALE SAME-SEX DESIRE IN CUBA, p. 396 27 ‘THAT’S NOT WHAT I SAID’: INTERPRETATIVE CONFLICT IN ORAL NARRATIVE RESEARCH, p. 412 28 EVIDENCE, EMPATHY AND ETHICS: LESSONS FROM ORAL HISTORIES OF THE KLAN, p. 424 29 REMEMBERING AND REWORKING EMOTIONS: THE REANALYSIS OF EMOTION IN AN INTERVIEW, p. 434 PART IV Making histories, p. 445 30 VOICE, EAR AND TEXT: WORDS, MEANING AND TRANSCRIPTION, p. 458 31 EDITING ORAL HISTORY FOR PUBLICATION, p. 470 32 THE AFFECTIVE POWER OF SOUND: ORAL HISTORY ON RADIO, p. 490 33 FOUNDLING VOICES: PLACING ORAL HISTORY AT THE HEART OF AN ORAL HISTORY EXHIBITION, p. 508 34 CO-CREATING OUR STORY: MAKING A DOCUMENTARY FILM, p. 522 35 THE HISTORICAL HEARING AID: LOCATED ORAL HISTORY FROM THE LISTENER’S PERSPECTIVE, p. 536 36 MAPPING MEMORIES OF DISPLACEMENT: ORAL HISTORY, MEMORYSCAPES AND MOBILE METHODOLOGIES, p. 556 PART V Advocacy and empowerment, p. 569 37 IMAGINING COMMUNITIES: MEMORY, LOSS AND RESILIENCE IN POST-APARTHEID CAPE TOWN, p. 581 38 SOUND, MEMORY AND DIS/PLACEMENT: EXPLORING SOUND, SONG AND PERFORMANCE AS ORAL HISTORY IN THE SOUTHERN AFRICAN BORDERLANDS, p. 595 39 ‘YOU HEAR IT IN THEIR VOICE’: PHOTOGRAPHS AND CULTURAL CONSOLIDATION AMONG INUIT YOUTHS AND ELDERS, p. 611 40 ‘WE KNOW WHAT THE PROBLEM IS’: USING VIDEO AND RADIO ORAL HISTORY TO DEVELOP COLLABORATIVE ANALYSIS OF HOMELESSNESS, p. 626 41 TRYING TO BE GOOD: LESSONS IN ORAL HISTORY AND PERFORMANCE, p. 636 42 ORAL HISTORY AND NEW ORTHODOXIES: NARRATIVE ACCOUNTS IN THE HISTORY OF LEARNING DISABILITY, p. 656 43 THE LIMITS OF ORAL HISTORY: ETHICS AND METHODOLOGY AMID HIGHLY POLITICIZED RESEARCH SETTINGS, p. 674 Select bibliography, p. 689 Useful contacts, p. 696 Index, p. 705

Bibliogr. p. [687]-703. Index