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oral history : ウィキペディア英語版
oral history

Oral history is the collection and study of historical information about individuals, families, important events, or everyday life using audiotapes, videotapes, or transcriptions of planned interviews. These interviews are conducted with people who participated in or observed past events and whose memories and perceptions of these are to be preserved as an aural record for future generations. Oral history strives to obtain information from different perspectives and most of these cannot be found in written sources. ''Oral history'' also refers to information gathered in this manner and to a written work (published or unpublished) based on such data, often preserved in archives and large libraries.〔(Article on ''oral history'' from the Columbia Encyclopedia )〕〔(Definition of ''oral history'' from the Online Dictionary for Library and Information Science )〕〔(Definition of ''oral history'' from the American Heritage Dictionary )〕〔(Definition of ''oral history'' from the Oxford Online Dictionaries )〕
The term is sometimes used in a more general sense to refer to any information about past events that people who experienced them tell anybody else,〔(Definition of ''oral history'' from the Macmillan Dictionary )〕〔(Definition of ''oral history'' from the Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary )〕 but professional historians usually consider this to be oral tradition. However, as the Columbia Encyclopedia〔 explains:
Primitive societies have long relied on oral tradition to preserve a record of the past in the absence of written histories. In Western society, the use of oral material goes back to the early Greek historians Herodotus and Thucydides, both of whom made extensive use of oral reports from witnesses. The modern concept of oral history was developed in the 1940s by Allan Nevins and his associates at Columbia University.

==In modern times==
Oral history has become an international movement in historical research. Oral historians in different countries have approached the collection, analysis, and dissemination of oral history in different modes. However, it should also be noted that there are many ways of creating oral histories and carrying out the study of oral history even within individual national contexts.
In the words of the ''Columbia Encyclopedia'':〔
The discipline came into its own in the 1960s and early 70s when inexpensive tape recorders were available to document such rising social movements as civil rights, feminism, and anti–Vietnam War protest. Authors such as Studs Terkel, Alex Haley, and Oscar Lewis have employed oral history in their books, many of which are largely based on interviews. In another important example of the genre, a massive archive covering the oral history of American music has been compiled at the Yale School of Music. By the end of the 20th cent. oral history had become a respected discipline in many colleges and universities. At that time the Italian historian Alessandro Portelli and his associates began to study the role that memory itself, whether accurate or faulty, plays in the themes and structures of oral history. Their published work has since become standard material in the field, and many oral historians now include in their research the study of the subjective memory of the persons they interview.


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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