oral history narrative assignment

Upload: katepuncochar

Post on 06-Apr-2018

219 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 8/2/2019 Oral History Narrative Assignment

    1/5

    Oral History Narrative Assignment

    I. Step One: Choosing a Topic

    You will want to choose a research topic that touches directly on the life experience of a familymember. Although you may have relatives who can recall events from the first half of the 20thcentury, in most cases you will choose a topic in postwar American history.

    Some broad topics in this time period are listed below to provide you with a starting-point for

    your research project. If you are unable to make a choice, you might go over this list with a

    parent to find a topic that suits a particular family member. You might learn, for example, that a

    grand-uncle was active in the Civil Rights Movement, or that a cousin served in the Gulf War.Or the list might suggest a different topic about another member of the family who has plenty to

    say.

    At this stage, you should keep in mind that you are choosing a topic for conversation, not for aresearch paper. The topic should be broad enough to allow for wide-ranging discussion and a

    rich variety of memories, yet focused enough to give the interview a shape and direction. Toonarrow a topic can turn an interview into an interrogation ("Where were you on the weekend of

    the Woodstock Festival?"). A more open-ended approach makes room for the unexpected and

    can lead to real discovery.

    Possible Topics in Postwar American History:

    1950sThe Cold War

    The Arms RaceThe Space Race

    The Civil Rights Movement

    Television: Sit-coms, Kid Shows, Sports, & Network News

    1960sYouth Culture & Social Protest

    The Women's Movement

    The Vietnam War

    The Black Power Movement

    The Arab-Israeli Conflict

    1970sWatergate

    The Energy Crisis

    The Environmental Movement

    The Malling of America

    The Computer Revolution

  • 8/2/2019 Oral History Narrative Assignment

    2/5

    1980sThe Gulf War

    Medical Breakthroughs: AIDS, Organ Transplants, & GeneticsThe Collapse of Communism in Europe

    Insurgency and Repression in Latin America

    The Struggle against Apartheid in South Africa

    II. Step Two: Background ResearchOnce you have selected a topic, you will conduct background research to become familiar with

    the basic facts behind the historical episode you plan to talk about. What people, places, andevents figure prominently in this chapter of American history? What ideas and assumptions

    affected the climate of opinion at the time? Such information can help you develop pertinent

    interview questions and will prepare you both to contextualize the memories shared with you andto pursue lines of inquiry that may arise.

    In addition to library resources, such as encyclopedias, chronicles, timelines, and handbooks, youcan research your topics using the internet.

    At theInternet Public Library

    20th Century PrecursorsLinks to key texts and background information on important authors and literature of the1930s to the 1950s.

    The Psychedelic SixtiesExtensive resources on the culture, politics, and temper of a turbulent decade.

    The History ChannelYear-by-year timelines with links to capsule information on important people, concepts,

    issues, and events.

    AtLearner.Org

    A Biography of AmericaProfiles of the Fifties, the Sixties, and the closing decades of the 20th century, with links

    to additional web resources on topics in each time period.

    Conversations With History

    Interviews with leading authorities on many aspects of postwar American foreign relations, aswell as other social issues.

    We Shall Overcome: Historic Places of the Civil Rights MovementA virtual tour highlighting key events and personalities in the struggle for racial equality.

    http://www.ipl.org/http://www.ipl.org/http://www.ipl.org/http://www.lib.virginia.edu/small/exhibits/sixties/20c.htmlhttp://www.lib.virginia.edu/small/exhibits/sixties/20c.htmlhttp://www.lib.virginia.edu/exhibits/sixties/index.htmlhttp://www.lib.virginia.edu/exhibits/sixties/index.htmlhttp://www.historychannel.com/http://www.historychannel.com/http://www.learner.org/exhibits/http://www.learner.org/exhibits/http://www.learner.org/exhibits/http://www.learner.org/biographyofamerica/index.htmlhttp://www.learner.org/biographyofamerica/index.htmlhttp://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/conversations/http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/conversations/http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/civilrights/http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/civilrights/http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/civilrights/http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/conversations/http://www.learner.org/biographyofamerica/index.htmlhttp://www.learner.org/exhibits/http://www.historychannel.com/http://www.lib.virginia.edu/exhibits/sixties/index.htmlhttp://www.lib.virginia.edu/small/exhibits/sixties/20c.htmlhttp://www.ipl.org/
  • 8/2/2019 Oral History Narrative Assignment

    3/5

    III. Step Three: Planning Your Questions

    Once you are familiar with your topic, you should be able to set a goal for your interview. What

    do you hope to find out through the memories your family member will share? This goal can befairly specific (e.g., How did the family member react to the Watergate scandal and why?) or

    more general (e.g., What has been the family member's experience with computers over the

    course of his or her life?). You might even have several closely related goals. It is important,however, that you prepare for your interviews with some objective in mind, and frame questions

    designed to help you achieve it.

    You will need to state your interview goals in writing and then develop a list of at least tenquestions that will help you gather the kind of historical information you are looking for. Below

    are guidelines for asking effective interview questions:

    Avoid questions that invite a "yes" or "no" answer. Instead of "Did you support theVietnam War?" ask "What were your feelings about the Vietnam War?"

    Avoid leading questions that suggest the response you want. Instead of "Wasn't itexciting when Neil Armstrong first stepped onto the moon?" ask "How did people react

    when Neil Armstrong first stepped onto the moon?"

    Ask open-ended questions that prompt a wide-ranging response. For example: "Tell meabout your experiences during the Energy Crisis." or "What do you remember about the

    beginning of the Space Race?"

    Plan to ask follow-up questions that elicit specific details. Ask "where" and "when"questions to pin down an anecdote. Ask for examples to back up a general observation.And always be ready to ask "why?"

    When you have completed your question lists, role-play interviews with another student inorderto test whether your questions are effective and easy to understand. I will also review your

    questions to assess whether they reflect factual knowledge of the topic, a clear objective for the

    interview, and an awareness of effective questioning methods.

    IV. Step 4: Conducting the InterviewWe will review the checklist, in class, discussing any points that raise questions. Use this

    opportunity to arrange to borrow a tape recorder from a classmate, if you do not own one. If tape

    recorders are unavailable to you, you can still conduct their interviews the old-fashioned way, bytaking notes and writing your family member's responses immediately afterward. You might also

    want to experiment with conducting interviews by email, with instant-messaging software, or via

    webcam.

  • 8/2/2019 Oral History Narrative Assignment

    4/5

    Oral History Interview Checklist

    Plan to tape record your interview. Practice operating the tape recorder before you holdthe interview. Bring extra tape and extra batteries.

    When you schedule the interview, ask your family member to bring along photos, newsclippings, and any other items that might help them tell you about your topic. Such"pieces of the past" can stir vivid memories and provide a tangible link to distant times.

    Print out your list of questions in a type size and format that is easy to read. Bring a padof paper and a pen so you can make notes during the interview.

    When you set up your equipment, label the tape with the date, the full name of the familymember you are interviewing, and the topic you plan to explore.

    When you turn on the tape recorder, create an aural label by saying, "This is (your name)and I am interviewing (your family member's name) on (the date) at (where the interview

    is taking place). We are going to talk about (your topic)."

    To get things started, you might ask you family member to talk about where he or shewas born and raised, or you can simply ask your first question.

    Take your time during the interview. Let your family member take as long as he or shewants to give an answer. Don't feel you have to rush through your questions, and becareful not to interrupt. Sometimes just sitting in silence for a second or two can prompt awhole new set of recollections.

    Resist the impulse to challenge the accuracy of your family member's memory. Tellingsomeone they have the facts wrong usually makes them reluctant to keep talking. It canalso turn a good interview into a pointless argument.

    When you have asked all your questions, always ask one more: "Is there anything Ihaven't asked about that you think I should know?"

    Before you turn off the tape, remember to thank your family member for helping youwith your oral history project.

    After your interview, you might send a copy of the tape to your family member alongwith a thank you note.

    V. Step 5: How Stories Become HistoryListen to your interviews and produce a summary using your list of questions as a preliminary

    outline. Transcribe key parts of the interview as you listen for stories and statements that areespecially revealing, or that bring a moment in the past back to life. Listen to your interview a

    second time to gain a more objective viewpoint on your family member's recollections and your

    own role in shaping the interview.

    Share evidence, from your interviews, of the impact events can have on individual lives.

    Describe the experience of family members who were directly involved in events like the Civil

    Rights Movement or the Women's Movement. Describe how events altered a family member'slife, sending an uncle on to graduate school, for example, during the draft for the Vietnam War,

    or prompting a grandmother to become vigilant about recycling in response to the Environmental

    Movement. Events can also have an emotional impact on individuals that may be revealed whenfamily members compare what they thought at the time, about Watergate, for example, and what

    they think about the event today. And in some lives, events can mark a turning-point, standing as

  • 8/2/2019 Oral History Narrative Assignment

    5/5

    the moment when an individual's personal history became swept up in the historical process and

    he or she made a choice, for example, to escape a volatile political situation in Latin America orto become an enthusiastic evangelist for personal computers.

    Explore how individual perspectives mediate our perceptions of the past. Compare a family

    member's recollection of an event with the accounts you read while conducting their backgroundresearch, and compare how individuals from different families remember the same event, such as

    the first moon landing or the destruction of the Berlin Wall. Through such comparisons,investigate how an individual's level of engagement may color his or her recollection of specific

    events, how an aunt who led a psychedelic life during the Sixties, for example, may remember

    those times much differently than a grandparent who only observed the hippie movement.Investigate also how subsequent events and nostalgia can color memories, leading a cousin, for

    example, to have a more positive impression of early television shows than most viewers had at

    the time.

    Provide evidence from your interviews of the way oral history can bring us closer to the past,

    give us a real feeling for the climate of the times, and evidence of the way it can filter our viewof the past, turning grays into black and white, assigning minor factors a major importance,under the influence of a lifetime's experience. Recognize that a historian must balance

    information gathered through any single oral history interview with information gathered

    through background research, and information provided in other interviews on the same topic, inorder to construct a valid account of the past.

    Combine your background research and your interviews to construct your own historicalnarratives or reports. Create a narrative to tell your family member's story in his or her own

    words, using your background research to fill in details and provide historical context. If you

    choose to quote your interviewee, quote accurately and indicate which parts of the narrative are

    direct or indirect quotes.

    VI. Oral PresentationsShare your oral narrative in a class presentation.