In this Issue
The Oral History Review, the official publication of the Oral History Association since 1973, explores the recording, transcribing, and preserving of conversations with people who have participated in important political, cultural, and economic social developments in modern times. Articles, book and film reviews, and bibliographies deal with the authentication of human experience and research findings in oral history. This journal considers a broad spectrum of different social groups, cultures, and countries through the use of interviews, songs, photos, diagrams, and storytelling.
published by
Oxford University Pressviewing issue
Volume 41, Issue 2, Summer/Fall 2014Table of Contents
- Studs Terkel, Historian
- pp. 269-278
- Oral History, Hermeneutics, and Embodiment
- pp. 290-300
- Why Jazz Happened by Marc Myers (review)
- pp. 381-382
- Memory Studies (review)
- pp. 384-386
- Editor’s Introduction
- pp. i-iii