ORAL
HISTORY FINALLY GETS ITS DUE
http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA421039
Alexander Street Pr.
Alexanderstreet.com/products/orhi.htm
Oral History Online (OHO) is an index to oral histories in English
that are available both on the web and in archives worldwide.
Repositories range from Columbia University’s Oral History
Research Office to the Imperial War Museum in London. OHO launched
in April with 7000 interviews and 850 collections. The file
itself contains no full text, but in many cases it links to
full-text
interviews and audio and video files, collection that are both
freely available on the web or fee-based. Most notably, interview-level
biographic records are indexed for histories; there are over
15,000 of these records now available.
Collections include Black History Oral History/Black Women,
a collection of oral histories detailing the experience of
black
women who attended Virginia Tech;
Conversations with History 2003, interviews with men and women who have shaped
modern history; the Family Farm Oral History Project, which focuses on the
experience of the family farmer in Kentucky; Seminoles, the
University of Florida’s
interviews with Seminole Indians; the Tejano Voices, which details the Latino
experience in Texas. Alexander Street expects to have available by the end
of the first year 300,000 interviews, 2300 collections, 600
video files, and 1600
audio files. The file is updated quarterly.
HOW DOES IT WORK? You can access the content via various methods.
To get an idea of what’s available, a quick glance through the Tables of Contents (TOC)
may do the trick. TOCs are browsable for Repositories, Collections, Interviews,
Interview Dates, Places, Historical Events, and All Subjects. But be warned that
once you go into the TOCs you may not come out again for hours – they are
enthralling. Here’s a taste of what’s listed (chronologically) in
the TOC for Historical Events: Civil War 1861-1865; Sand Creek Massacre, 1864;
Spanish-American War, 1898; Mexican Revolution, 1910-1920; Triangle Shirtwaist
Company Fire, 1911; Holocaust, 1938-1945; Japanese American Internment, 1942-1945;
Nuremberg Trials, 1945-1949; Martin Luther King’s March on Washington,
August 28, 1963; Kent State University Riot, May 4, 1970; and Kosovo War,
1998-1999.
Repositories represented include A Time of Visions, Abilene Christian
University/Department
of History; Camp Evans Infoage Science History Center; Gestalt Journal
Press’s
Gestalt Therapy Page; Leather Archives & Museum in Chicago; and much more.
The breadth and variety is considerable.
As I browsed through the Repositories TOC, I came upon the British Library
Sound Archive, linked to it, and found an 1890 audio recording of Florence
Nightingale.
Then there’s the Oklahoma Historical Society Research Library Link,
which leads to its Oral History archive in which I could reference records
(and request
copies) of interviews on topics ranging from Will Rogers to Wiley Post,
from Wild West Shows to Oklahoma City Bombing.
You’ll eventually want to search the database. Interviews can be searched
by 23 different criteria, including Keyword, Narrator, Age at Interview, Date
of Birth, Place of Birth, Gender, Occupation, Race, All Subjects, Years Discussed,
Places Discussed, People Discussed, Organizations Discussed, Interviewer, Date
of Interview, and more. You can sort results by collection, title, or interview
year and limit it to include only records with full text, audio, and/or video.
You can Find a Collection by searching for a word or phrase in all fields or
by collection name. You can also search a range of dates for the year of a collection’s
creation, or search by city, country, or repository name. The folks who
put this together understand how historians seek information.
For a more complex search, I entered “Japanese-American” in Keywords
in Interview, “California” in Places Discussed, and “Internment” in
Historical Events Discussed. This gave me 1,097 results (mentions in
paragraph of text), many of which came from the Japanese American Relocation
Digital Archive
and which linked directly to the full text of interviews with Japanese
Americans who were interned during World War II.
CAN YOU AND YOUR PATRONS USE IT? The information
in this product is arranged beautifully. When it makes sense to list
something chronologically,
it
is. When you wish there was an alternate means of looking for information,
there
is. Will
librarians find it so? A resounding yes.
HOW GOOD IS IT? Sorry to set the bar so high the first column out,
but this is a ten. Even the Help functions are fantastic. Alexander
Street
has included
so
much useful information, and made it so intelligently accessible,
it’s
hard to imagine how the file can be made better…except by
adding more content.
WHAT’S THE COST? Twelve-month access ranges
from $250 for an American Oral History Association Member to $3990
for public libraries serving two million
patrons or more. Academic and public library access is unlimited,
and discounts are available through consortia or for multiple purchases.
For detailed information,
consult the web site.
THE BOTTOM LINE An essential resource for serious historical and
cultural researchers, Oral History Online is unreservedly recommended
for public
and academic libraries,
special collections, and archives/museums.

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