Session Proposals – THATCamp Oral History Association 2012 http://oha2012.thatcamp.org The Humanities and Technology Camp Sat, 13 Oct 2012 19:38:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 How can I upload a podcast file to my webpage? http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/10/12/how-can-i-upload-a-podcast-file-to-my-webpage/ Sat, 13 Oct 2012 03:28:38 +0000 http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/?p=341 Continue reading ]]>

Uploading a podcast (sound) file to a webpage.

I would like to add pieces of student interviews to a webpage.  Many use their iphones, and I am thinking that I could easily put up interviews for class purposes.

I am a novice, so here I have just done the basics of creating a podcast and uploading it to my webpage.

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Omeka and general Oral History web publishing http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/10/12/omeka-and-general-oral-history-web-publishing/ Sat, 13 Oct 2012 01:26:17 +0000 http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/?p=338

I’m somewhat new to web publishing. I have been to an Omeka workshop but wouldn’t mind a refresher. Also, it would be great to learn any new outlets for oral history display and publishing, especially low-budget.

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What is Omeka and how can I use it? http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/10/12/what-is-omeka-and-how-can-i-use-it/ http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/10/12/what-is-omeka-and-how-can-i-use-it/#comments Fri, 12 Oct 2012 13:25:23 +0000 http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/?p=325 Continue reading ]]>

According to the Omeka web site:

Omeka is a free, flexible, and open source web-publishing platform for the display of library, museum, archives, and scholarly collections and exhibitions. Its “five-minute setup” makes launching an online exhibition as easy as launching a blog.

So, does that mean I can use it for my projects?

I plan to do an overview of Omeka, what you need to install it, how you can use it, how you can create web sites.

Omeka is widely used in the digital humanities. Come and see if it can work for you.

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Marketing, Archiving, and Using Digital Multimeida Oral History Projects http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/10/11/marketing-archiving-and-using-digital-multimeida-oral-history-projects/ http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/10/11/marketing-archiving-and-using-digital-multimeida-oral-history-projects/#comments Fri, 12 Oct 2012 00:42:05 +0000 http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/?p=288 Continue reading ]]>

I’ve become very curious and excited recently about how corporations, nonprofits, and others are using social media, in particular different social media sites, for marketing a specific part of a product or project. I’m curious if anyone is interested in examining how from its inception an oral history project can use various social media websites to do pre-marketing, real time marketing, and post marketing to keep up interest in a project. So for example, creating a Facebook page that syncs with a Twitter feed to give instant updates about the design and plan for an oral history project, while Soundcloud, Timblr, and Pinterest could each have different parts of a digital oral history project linked to each other. So for example a wav or mp3 file could be put on soundcloud, a blog with photographs could be on Tumblr, while unique pinboards could be created on Pinterest.

Do this sound interesting to anybody?

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Digital Project-Driven Oral History as a Teaching Tool http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/10/11/digital-project-driven-oral-history-as-a-teaching-tool/ http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/10/11/digital-project-driven-oral-history-as-a-teaching-tool/#comments Thu, 11 Oct 2012 17:30:18 +0000 http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/?p=261 Continue reading ]]>

I would like to form a session of those interested in discussing experiences with building an oral history collection whose primary function is to support a specific digital project. In my own experience working with colleagues, students, and community groups through CSU’s Center for Public History + Digital Humanities, we set up many of the nearly 800 oral histories that we have conducted with the explicit purpose of creating sound clips to use on the mobile history app we have been developing (as well as for a prior project). In doing so, we have, nonetheless, striven to adhere to best practices in oral history, ranging from archiving interviews to creating a space for our interviewees to tell their own stories whether they fit our ends or not. In at least one sense, our project-driven methodology, which places a premium on high-quality, uninterrupted personal narratives, may actually have enabled us to do a better job of being mindful of fostering such an environment.

Loosely related to the issues above, I am interesting in sharing experiences with others who have trained students or community members to conduct oral histories. In this, perhaps unsurprisingly, my experience has been mixed. A host of factors account for the challenges of transferring oral history skills to those who have never conducted an interview. Given the time constraints of the typical university semester, logistics of identifying interview subjects, scheduling, using recording equipment, finding suitable space, etc., have you developed any tried-and-true methods for producing robust results? I am also happy to share how I am guiding students to create digital projects (and why for the time being I have stopped having my students conduct oral histories). A selfish hope I’ll share is that I hope to be inspired to return project-driven oral history collecting to the center of some of my teaching in the not-too-distant future.

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digitizing oral and video interviews http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/10/11/digitizing-oral-and-video-interviews/ http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/10/11/digitizing-oral-and-video-interviews/#comments Thu, 11 Oct 2012 14:04:05 +0000 http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/?p=259 Continue reading ]]>

I’m a volunteer at the Oberlin Heritage Center in Oberlin.  I’ve been collecting video interviews for over 20 years and would like to discover ways to save these in our collections in usable formats.  We also have an extensive collection of analog audio tapes that we want to transfer to digital format efficiently.  We do have a number of volunteers and an active oral history committee.

I would be comfortable talking about my experience interviewing individuals on video and video editing but would like to exchange info about the process of digital archiving and switching to new digital recording format.

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Flashy Reconstitutioning http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/10/09/flashy-reconstitutioning/ http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/10/09/flashy-reconstitutioning/#comments Tue, 09 Oct 2012 17:54:32 +0000 http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/?p=240 Continue reading ]]>

After the first year of developing and starting an oral history project, I felt immediately pressured for more, more MORE! While I was done and happy for the year; the initial interviews and photos were now stored, they would one day be archived, and the project would continue the following year, the students and seniors and those in my university community seemed surprised that, that was it. So, I started using the photographs and audio from the interviews in order to create an annual video recap. (The second year, I got a lot fancier.) This has managed to drum up support from all angles, and they are very fun to show, but it is not the direction I originally saw for the project. I would love to explore how others have reconstituted their oral histories, why we’ve done it, how we’ve done it and the pros and cons of doing so.

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Parts & Wholes http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/10/03/parts-wholes/ http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/10/03/parts-wholes/#comments Wed, 03 Oct 2012 19:04:17 +0000 http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/?p=215 Continue reading ]]>

I am fascinated with the problems associated with visualizing oral history, which I blogged about, and which is part of my contribution to the Oral History in the Digital Age project.

As I have mulled this problem, I have increasingly realized that the digital revolution presents a problem for oral historians that problematizes the oral history as the unit of analysis. Increasingly, we parse, divide, tag, and work with oral histories as a small collection of discreet pieces or clips. This surely is an appropriate way to work with oral history, but has just as surely altered how we think about oral history as a unit of analysis. This transformation has generated a host of new tools, such as Ohms at the University of Kentucky. It has also become the way that public historians are using oral history, as in Cleveland Historical.

I would like to consider examples of projects in both the archiving and exhibition of oral history and engage in a discussion of what this implies about professional practice in the digital age.

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Geo-tagging oral histories http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/09/21/geo-tagging-oral-histories/ http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/09/21/geo-tagging-oral-histories/#comments Fri, 21 Sep 2012 12:47:49 +0000 http://oha2012.thatcamp.org/?p=194 Continue reading ]]>

Hello:

I would be interested in a session on adding geospatial information, which would allow locating and collocating digital oral histories on such maps as HistoryPin.  Given its timeline feature, it may support establishing relationships between recordings and other digital content.  In the Veterans History Project, geographical locations are provided for the location service — albeit very generally, such as Korean War, Vietnam War — and the interviewees’ state of residence, but this is less clear for World War I and II topics.  If Digital History aims at providing such data at a greater granularity, specifics should be added, which would provide historians with additional leads to support research on very specific topics.  However, not all oral histories (I mean both the recording and transcript) may be published digitally if the interviewees do not agree to such publications, so a more diversified strategy may be needed.   For recordings with permissions, the geo-tags and other key words should adequately describe the media.  If the transcript is also published (with the interviewees’ and interviewers’ permission), perhaps TEI should be used to add the geo-location in body of the transcript as well.  This approach will require extensive textual analysis, but it may well be worthwhile.  For oral histories without either the transcripts or recording or both accessible online, the catalog record should contain this information in greater detail, and researchers may still be able to listen to the recordings, read transcripts, and develop a map with geographical locations mentioned in the interviews. The MARC standard used by libraries,  EAD in use at archives, and the various metadata schemas like Dublin Core have fields for geographic locations to accommodate such enhancements.  I hope to see an interdisciplinary group of archivists, digital historians, geographers, and librarians in such a session if possible.

 

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