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Aural history
Aural history













aural history

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    aural history aural history

    I ended up sitting at my desk, taking frantic notes, frequently stopping, backtracking, and then restarting the podcast. I tried to walk around the neighborhood, mimicking the way my students use podcasts, and then I tried doing the dishes, the way friends use podcasts, but neither practice let me do more than passively listen.

    #Aural history cracked#

    My review didn’t end with a published book transformed by a cracked spine and extensive marginalia. But in order to do a podcast review, I couldn’t sit in a comfy chair to read. As much as historians incorporate artifacts, material culture, cinema, ­­photographs, and so on into our sets of sources, the act of studying history largely remains a sedentary and visual practice. For historians, something that began in 1995 is cutting edge.Īgreeing to review a podcast and actually reviewing it are two separate matters. Frankly, I have only recently noticed that it’s become the twenty-first ­­century, so I am unsurprised that I might well be catching up to a trend started twenty-five years ago with This American Life. Some people read the newspaper in the morning others listen to podcasts when they take a walk. National Life Stories’ main focus and expertise has been oral history fieldwork interviews are carried out on a project basis and all NLS collections are held in the British Library.Podcasts have become one of the media students use on a regular basis. We also carry our own programme of life story recordings through National Life Stories, an independent trust within the Oral History Section of the British Library. Further information can be found in the Oral History Collection Development Policy. Where the curators are unable to accept an offered collection every effort will be made to help identify an alternative archival repository to which the donor can be referred. We collect audio and video interviews, and suitable original oral history material that provides insight into aspects of UK personal memory, identity and experience. Our oral history collections cover a wide range of subject areas relating to British life, work, culture, and experience.















    Aural history