Abstract
Much of the strong impulse to “go remote” with oral history practice was tied to a desire to organize rapid-response projects to document the ways in which the COVID-19 pandemic was impacting communities around the globe. Oral history in the midst or immediate aftermath of crisis is a phenomenon that has become an increasingly common application of the methodology since the turn of the twenty-first century. 1 Oral historians were drawn to study the impact of a pandemic on the global citizenry from a host of angles, a disruption of life that an epidemiological event had not caused on such a scale in over one hundred years. New projects emerged at a frenzied pace to gather oral histories around the globe. In the second section of this volume, you will find several examples of such work: accounts from our colleagues around the world about how they approached doing oral history remotely and the decisions they had to make.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Sloan, S. M. (2024). INTRODUCTION. In Oral History at a Distance (pp. 3–18). Taylor and Francis. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003206606-2
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