Shared Authority
Essays on the Craft and Meaning of Oral and Public History
Häftad, Engelska, 1990
539 kr
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum1990-05-17
- Mått152 x 229 x 18 mm
- Vikt426 g
- FormatHäftad
- SpråkEngelska
- SerieSUNY series in Oral and Public History
- Antal sidor273
- FörlagState University of New York Press
- ISBN9780791401330
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Michael Frisch is Professor and Chair of the Department of American Studies at State University of New York at Buffalo.
- Acknowledgments Introduction I. Memory, History, and Cultural Authority Headnotes 1. Oral History and Hard Times: A Review Essay2. The Memory of History3. American History and the Structures of Collective Memory: A Modest Exercise in Empirical Iconography II. Interpretive Authority in Oral History Headnotes 4. Oral History and the Presentation of Class Consciousness: The New York Times v. The Buffalo Unemployed5. Preparing Interview Transcripts for Documentary Publication: A Line-by-Line Illustration of the Editing Process6. Presenting and Receiving Oral History across Cultural Space: A Note on Responses of Chinese Students to the Documentary Trilogy One Village in China7. Oral History, Documentary, and the Mystification of Power: A Critique of Vietnam: A Television History III. A Shared Authority: Scholarship, Audience, and Public Presentation Headnotes 8. Quality in History Programs: From Celebration to Exploration of Values9. Town Into City: A Reconsideration on the Occasion of Springfield's 350th Anniversary, 1636-198610. "Get the Picutre?": A Review Essay11. Audience Expectations as Resource and Challenge: Ellis Island as a Case Study12. Urban Public History in Celebratory Contexts: The Example of the "Philadelphia's Moving Past" Project13. The Presentation of Urban History in Big City Museums Notes
"Frisch's essays penetrate the historical consciousness of the nation and expose its distortions. He is not afraid to 'depart from the usual academic form.' This volume ranges from insightful essays and interviews to book and film reviews, but despite its sweep of subjects and form, its pieces build coherently upon each other. This is an entertaining, illuminating, and provocative body of work."Two pieces from the book—evaluating the New York Times' editing of oral history for publication, and the PBS documentary "Vietnam: A Television History"—provide especially strong examples of the intellectual insight and importance of this book. Both analyze not only the content of the presentations but the omissions, penetrating the values of the editors and raising serious questions about the packaging of history for the public."Frisch lends a critical ear to the public presentation of history, particularly history drawing from oral sources. He hears not only what was said, but who said it, and what was asked of them. He questions the assumptions and motivations that transformed oral testimony into publications and documentary films, and the ways in which those products have been popularly received." — Donald A. Ritchie, U.S. Senate Historical Office