Abstract
Tens of thousands of oral history interviews sitting in archival drawers, on computer hard drives, or on library bookshelves have never been listened to. Thousands of new interviews are being added each year by the many large testimony projects now underway, including Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission and the Historica–Dominion Institute’s Memory Project. Although the existence of these immense collections is widely known, the interviews are difficult to access. How can we combine oral history and new media to ensure that the potential of such important projects is fully realized? Emergent and digital technologies are opening up new possibilities for accessing Canadian memories and transmitting them to various audiences. New forms of media are changing the ways we think about and do oral and public history.
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CITATION STYLE
High, S. (2012). Telling Our Stories/Animating Our Past: A Status Report on Oral History and Digital Media. Canadian Journal of Communication, 37(3), 383–404. https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2012v37n3a2541
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