Blog

Tamarama Surf Life Saving Club

The Tamarama Surf Life Saving Club story, as told by its passionate old guard of 26 life members, has been committed to film.  In the hands of Tama’s resident historian Philippa Ardlie what started as an attempt to record an oral history of the surf club snowballed into a full-blown documentary – A Way of Life.  For full story, click here.

Memory & History by Bridget Brereton

"The outbreak of World War 1—the events of July and August 1914—is being commemorated in this centenary year, and for the next four years, there will be events marking the various episodes in this terrible conflict. But the history of the war can now only be written from written sources." To read the full article which argues for the importance of oral history, click here.

Living with Schizophrenia

The Oral History Review on OUPblog podcast is back!  Today’s episode features OHR contributors Drs. Linda Crane and Tracy McDonough answering OHR Managing Editor Troy Reeves’s questions about the Schizophrenia Oral History Project and their article, “Living with Schizophrenia: Coping, Resilience, and Purpose,” which appears in the most recent Oral History Review. – See more and listen here.     

Tasmanian Fishermen Stories

Tasmania's amazing coastline and abundant fisheries give the state a unique legacy of stories from the sea.  Not just the 'tall tales' fishermen are famous for.  Real stories of the life, the times and the livelihoods around finfish and scallops and crays.  For full story with audio click here.

Fishing History in New Zealand

The port of Timaru has been home to a thriving fishing industry for many years and now part of its commercial history will be recorded, thanks to a $20,000 New Zealand Oral History Awards grant.  Timaru women Linda Hepburn and Ruth Low will use the grant to fund research and audio interviews with families who over the years have contributed to the industry.

Oral History of the Internet

In many ways, the world we inhabit today isn’t so dramatically different from the one that existed in 1994. The roads were full of Americans SUVs and Japanese sedans; Congress was mired in partisan dysfunction. Americans vaguely roused their enthusiasm for soccer as their team surpassed expectations in the World Cup. At night you flicked on cable, with hundreds of channels.  And then there was the way you used a computer.  If you had a computer, and many people did, it sat on your desk and ran programs on floppy disks. It connected to the printer and—if you were very tech savvy—to a dial-up service like America Online or Compuserve.  For full story click here.

Oral History in Iran

The oral history project manager Vahid Tabaei elaborated on oral history definition as well as his current projects in this area. For Tabaei, oral history is a part of contemporary history at whose heart is incident. “We take an incident and interview the people who have taken part in it or have been its eyewitnesses,” he said.  In an interview with IBNA, Tabaei said that the difference between oral history and memory is that when someone talks on his memory or writes on it, he retells some part of the incidents that has had impact on him/her. For full story click here.

Cooma Oral Histories

The Big hART theatre company is brewing up the ingredients for a new production involving the Cooma community, the band Mikelangelo and the Black Sea Gentlemen, and a cast including Lex Marinos, Anne Grigg and Bruce Myles. Local high school students are recording oral histories in the community to provide stories and themes for the music and script being directed by Scott Rankin. On Sunday 29 June the community is invited to a special performance of the material developed so far. The completed show will be performed at the Canberra Theatre Centre in 2015.  For full story from the ABC click here.