Category: Oral History (Page 4 of 4)

Veterans History Project and Women’s History Month

Hello!

This is my inaugural post and thanks to the Archives and Public History Program for the (cyber) space.

I work at the Veterans History Project at the Library of Congress, which has teamed up with NARA, NEH, the National Gallery of Art, National Park Service, Smithsonian and USHMM to pay tribute to women and their accomplishments, from ecology to aviation. (Here’s the official site).

The Veterans History Project has collected the oral history testimony of thousands of women who’ve participated in America’s defining conflicts of the 20th and 21st centuries. You can listen to a handful of highlighted stories in our web-feature “Women of Four Wars” and you can search our database to learn about Women Airforce Service Pilots in World War II, nurses in Vietnam and Korea, and female helicopter pilots in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Sometimes it’s easy to be cynical about our national history months. There seems to be one every month, and the celebrations can be a bit hokie or simplistic. Oral history helps reinforce what these months are supposed to be about.  Women’s History Month celebrates extraordinary women in order to recognize how inextricable their contributions are to the accomplishments of America as a whole, as well as empower younger generations. The experiences of military women collected by the Veterans History Project illuminate how “ordinary” women became extraordinary through their actions under the most trying of circumstances.  It reminds us that events do not define us, but rather how we respond to events. Military women have consistently responded in historic ways.

How else does oral history work to enhance and add meaning to our national history months? I’d be interested to hear comments from those at other institutions.

Oral History Workshop

Workshop Title: Accessing Oral Histories

Workshop Description:

Oral historian Alessandro Portelli states that “[oral] sources are oral sources… The tone and volume range and the rhythm of popular speech carry implicit meaning and social connotations which are not reproducible in writing.”[1] In managing oral history programs, archivists often face the challenge of providing researchers with access to the oral source (actual audio/video document) instead of only to its transcript. The audio-visual aspect of an oral history collection becomes an increasingly pressing priority as issues arise in preserving analog media. The continual advancement of tools for digitizing collections is giving way to new user accessibility, and subsequently, archivists are finding exciting potential for renewed scholarly and public interest in oral histories.

Join the Brooklyn Historical Society Oral History Program Coordinator Sady Sullivan on Thursday, November 19th, for a workshop exploring the frontier of digital access to oral histories. Discussion topics will include cataloging tools (Past Perfect, OMEKA, and more), digitization of collections (born-digital and digitized oral histories), types of online access (databases, podcasts), and fantasy future audio-searching software.

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The Brooklyn Historical Society oral history collection began in 1973 with the Puerto Rican Oral History Project: 69 interviews with Brooklyn residents who migrated from Puerto Rico via steamship between 1917 and 1940. Today, the BHS oral history collection contains interviews with over 300 narrators, and soon, all of these interviews will be accessible to listeners in the Othmer Library and also available in a selection online.

BHS Oral History Highlights: http://brooklynhistory.org/blog/tag/oral-history-highlights/

Find samples from Brooklyn Historical Society’s Oral History Collection on iTunes.

Instructor: Sady Sullivan

Sady Sullivan is coordinator of the Oral History Program at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Since 2006, she has led five oral history projects and conducted life history interviews with over 150 people, as well as trained and overseen the work of other interviewers helping to build BHS’s oral history collection. In addition, she manages the digitization of BHS’s legacy oral histories – 11 projects dating back to 1973 and encompassing over 200 interviews. BHS is working to make these collections available for listening through a searchable database in the Othmer Library. Sady brings ten years of story-collecting experience to her role as oral historian at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Her interview technique demonstrates a merging of social science, journalistic, and Buddhist deep listening approaches, respectfully drawing out memories to be shared.

Date: Thursday, November 19, 2009

Time: 5:30 pm to 8:00 pm

Location: Brooklyn Historical Society, 128 Pierrepont Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201

Directions:

By subway: 2,3,4,5 to Borough Hall, A,C,F to Jay St/Borough Hall, or M,R to Court St.

By bus: North – South: B 38, B52, B25, B26, B41 to Montague/Court Street
East – West: B 67, B65 to Jay Street
From Manhattan: B51 City Hall to Court St. /Cadman Plaza WEEKDAY SERVICE ONLY

Light refreshments will be provided.

Workshop Fee and Registration: ART-NY Members / Non-members $25 / $30

Registration Deadline: Friday, October 16, 2009.

We are offering a package deal for non-members that include NYART membership and admission to the workshop for $50. Please note that membership cycles run from July to June. Please be sure to attach a membership form which is attached to this email and also available on our website: http://www.nycarchivists.org/membershipForm.html

PLEASE NOTE: SPACE IS LIMITED TO THE FIRST 55 REGISTRANTS

Checks made payable to: Archivists Round Table Metropolitan New York

and

Checks and registration mailed to: Bonnie Marie Sauer, National Archives at New York
201 Varick Street, 12th Floor, New York, NY 10014-4811

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[1] “What Makes Oral History Different?”, The Death of Luigi Trastulli and other Stories: Form and Meaning in Oral History (Albany, New York: SUNY Press, 1991)

Peter J. Wosh
Director, Archives/Public History Program
History Department
New York University
53 Washington Square South
New York NY 10012
Phone: (212) 998-8601
Fax: (212) 995-4017
http://history.fas.nyu.edu/object/history.gradprog.archivespublichistory.html

StoryCorps

The following internship opportunities are currently available at StoryCorps, a Peabody Award-winning oral history project and one of the fastest-growing nonprofit organizations in the country. Please share these openings with your networks.

Information Technology Intern, Web Based Systems
Memory Loss Initiative Outreach Intern
Print Intern
StoryCorps Historias Outreach Intern
There are also several additional internship opportunities at StoryCorps (on both the Program and Operations side of our organization) for future internship sessions. You can read the full list at http://www.storycorps.org/about/employment-opportunities/internships.

To apply: please send cover letter and resume to internship@storycorps.org and include your last name and the semester for which you are applying in the subject line (e.g., “Smith, Spring 2010″). Include both cover letter and resume as attachments entitled “YourNameLetter” and “YourNameResume.” In your cover letter, please tell us how you found out about this opportunity, and identify the specific internship(s) in which you are interested. No calls please.


Thanks,

Megan Thiele
HR Generalist

StoryCorps
80 Hanson Pl, 2nd Floor
Brooklyn, NY 11217
Phone: (646) 723.7020 ext. 28

Help StoryCorps record more stories from communities like yours throughout the United States
www.storycorps.org/donate

Join StoryCorps’ Facebook Fan Page
facebook.com/storycorps

Peter J. Wosh
Director, Archives/Public History Program
History Department
New York University
53 Washington Square South
New York NY 10012
Phone: (212) 998-8601
Fax: (212) 995-4017
http://history.fas.nyu.edu/object/history.gradprog.archivespublichistory.html

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