Using oral history and archival research to advance gender studies in management and organisational studies

2021 ◽  
pp. 71-85
Author(s):  
Hannah Dean ◽  
Lorna Stevenson
2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margareta von Oswald

What are the possibilities and limits of engaging with colonialism in ethnological museums? This book addresses this question from within the Africa department of the Ethnological Museum in Berlin. It captures the Museum at a moment of substantial transformation, as it prepared the move of its exhibition to the Humboldt Forum, a newly built and contested cultural centre on Berlin’s Museum Island. The book discusses almost a decade of debate in which German colonialism was negotiated, and further recognised, through conflicts over colonial museum collections. Based on two years of ethnographic fieldwork examining the Museum’s various work practices, this book highlights the Museum’s embeddedness in colonial logics and shows how these unfold in the Museum’s everyday activity. It addresses the diverse areas of expertise in the Ethnological Museum – the preservation, storage, curation, and research of collections – and also draws on archival research and oral history interviews with current and former employees. Working through Colonial Collections unravels the ongoing and laborious processes of reckoning with colonialism in the Ethnological Museum’s present – processes from which other ethnological museums, as well as Western museums more generally, can learn.


Author(s):  
Jan-Georg Deutsch

This chapter explores how the end of slavery is remembered in Tanzania. While the subject of ‘The end of slavery in Africa’ has attracted a substantial number of outstanding scholars, few researchers have conducted oral interviews, especially in East Africa. The author undertook field research, collecting contemporary memories of the end of slavery over a period of three months in the mid-1990s in various parts of Tanzania. The interviews were meant to complement archival research. The chapter shows that the memory of the end of slavery and the archival record fail to correspond with each other, and offers an explanation of why this is the case.


Genealogy ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 66
Author(s):  
Shamus Y. MacDonald

Drawing on a combination of oral history and archival research, this article reconstructs a historic view of death and dying in areas of the province settled by Scottish Gaels. It discusses beliefs and customs associated with death, giving special attention to traditional house wakes. Inspired by studies in culturally related communities in Ireland, Scotland, and Newfoundland, this study highlights insider perspectives of local customs and beliefs in order to develop a clearer understanding of the relationship previous generations had to death in Gaelic Nova Scotia. This study concludes by suggesting why some mortuary customs were abandoned during the second part of the twentieth century.


2014 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 26-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine Reiser Robbins ◽  
Mark W. Robbins

There is a well-established call for more attention to contested and dissonant cultural heritage in the public memory of historic places, particularly in attending to ethnic, class, and gendered experiences. Although hailing the contributions made to date, critics have also observed that the results have tended to be confined to symbolic or rhetorical effects. Utilizing the insights of engaged anthropology, we examine the potential of a community-engaged, collaborative research design that integrates oral history, archaeology, and archival research as a means of building a polyvocal public memory. The study is carried out “in place” at a long-sacred public plaza that has been the subject of interpretive controversy for many decades. We suggest that the combination of oral history and archaeological methodologies, carried out simultaneously and on-site with the community, enables an interplay of material, spatial, and discursive perspectives that moves contested cultural heritage from “narrative to action.”


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 233-251
Author(s):  
Tiago Silva Alves Muniz

This article aims to address the impacts of rubber via historical and contemporary archaeology of the Amazon. Through an “archaeology of rubber” a notion of modernity is examined here. From the creation of rubber gloves to snow boots and tires, rubber has allowed humans to expand their interactions with the environment. As these interactions expanded, the consolidation of the Industrial Revolution and Occidentalism entangled actors in a complex web of meanings, becomings and agencies in opposition to local knowledge. Through a plural and multispecies approach, this article places the study of rubber’s materiality in the field of the archaeology of capitalism and modernity. Also, through oral history, deep archival research and public archaeology, local ontologies and materialities offer contemporary archaeology a more elastic view, aimed at widening perceptions of a global story.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 202-220 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nishant Upadhyay ◽  
Anjaneya Sharma

Bundelkhand lies in the central part of India including 6 districts in northern Madhya Pradesh and 7 districts in southern Uttar Pradesh (13 districts in total). In Bundelkhand, a series of walled gardens of similar type (presumably of second half of the eighteenth/beginning of the nineteenth century) can be seen all across the region. These gardens are part of the social and cultural life of the Bundeli people, but still their historical and cultural values cannot be ascertained. Thus, in order to understand these gardens, a very detailed understanding of the regional landscape needs to be developed. This research article aims to understand and regenerate the cultural landscape of Rajnagar in Bundelkhand based on archival research, architectural documentation and oral history narratives. The article elaborates upon the methodology followed to obtain sufficient information about the original planning, design and functions of the gardens, and the sociocultural spatial configuration of historical Rajnagar. Architectural and oral surveys were undertaken to generate data at settlement and garden level along with the archival research. Survey of the oral history regarding the settlement and general association with the gardens immensely facilitated to position the gardens in the historical context, given the lack of archival evidence. The interpolation of the three sources of data allowed to understand the pattern of evolution of the historical settlement of Rajnagar and the connections with the royal gardens within the settlement. Apart from furthering the understanding about these unique urban landscape phenomenon, the survey results contribute to the preparation of a sustainable tourism development plan for the royal Bundeli gardens of Rajnagar by Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage (INTACH) Belgium. The multiple oral and architectural surveys also raised awareness within the town about the historical Bundeli garden landscapes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 68 (4) ◽  
pp. 340-364
Author(s):  
Markéta Hajská

AbstractThe author of the study presents a micro-historical study of a family of Vlach Roma (Lovára) of western Slovakian origin, who were one of the few Romani groups still on the move in the mid-1950s and who in the late 1950s were forced to settle in the towns of Louny and Žatec in north-western Bohemia. Against this background the author focuses on some aspects of the Czechoslovak assimilation policy of the 1950s regarding ‘itinerant Gypsies’, designed to limit their mobility, which is represented mainly by the implementation of the Law on the Permanent Settlement of Itinerant Persons (No. 74/1958 Coll.). Using a combination of oral history methods involving Vlach Romani narrators and of archival research, the author clarifies some aspects of the local process of the implementation of the above-mentioned law and of selected impacts of the registration of travelling and semi-travelling people in February 1959. The forced sedentarization which occurred in the two localities under study is presented in the context of the regime of state socialism and the policies of central as well as local authorities towards so-called ‘travelling Gypsies’ in the late 1950s.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (136) ◽  
pp. 209-216
Author(s):  
Michelle Chase

Abstract Two young Cuban historians, Ailynn Torres Santana and Diosnara Ortega González, discuss their forthcoming book of oral histories with Cuban women. They describe their methodology, their intellectual formation, and the reception of gender studies and oral history in the Cuban academy.


2009 ◽  
Vol 36 ◽  
pp. 421-438 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Vansina

Thirty-four years ago David Henige launched History in Africa (hereafter HA) at a time when scholars often cut corners in their rush to construct a history of Africa, and disregarded rules of evidence, thereby running the risk that many of their reconstructions would prove to be unsound. The question was not that these scholars were wholly indifferent to methodology, but that the precolonial history of the continent was the cynosure of the field at the time, and hence that all eyes were turned towards the use of oral sources to overcome the perceived scarcity of written sources for that period and to provide voices from the continent. In their haste to fill huge voids in the story of Africa's past, scholars debated the rules of evidence in relation to such unconventional sources. They often disregarded almost every methodological canon when it came to written data. Crucial differences between primary and secondary sources were ignored, archival research was scanty, new editions of older publications were mere reprints accompanied or not by new introductions that were so uninformed as to be useless, while issues about authenticity, authorship, chronology, or translation were all brushed aside as quibbles. Thus, in the days before 1974, methodological concerns focused exclusively on oral tradition and oral history to the detriment of everything else. As its initial editorial made clear, HA was launched as a forum where scholars interested in method could publish articles about all the facets of the historical method—from epistemology to heuristics, rules of evidence, and historiography. The journal was founded and the contributors came.


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