《女性口述历史:前沿读本

IF 0.1 4区 社会学 0 FOLKLORE WESTERN FOLKLORE Pub Date : 2002-10-01 DOI:10.2307/1500428
D. Hanson, S. Armitage, P. Hart, Karen Weathermon
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引用次数: 27

摘要

《女性口述历史:前沿读本》由苏珊·h·阿米蒂奇与帕特里夏·哈特和凯伦·威瑟蒙编辑。林肯:内布拉斯加大学出版社,2002年。Pp. xii + 392,引言,照片,插图,注释,索引。雪莉·托马斯在她的文章《挖掘表面之下:口述历史技巧》的结语中写道:“普通人绝对是重要的,他们的故事很重要,我们需要他们所有的故事。”托马斯的这句话可以作为选集《女性口述历史:前沿读者》的基本信条。自1975年创刊以来,每年三届的《前沿》:《妇女研究杂志》被认为是一本有兴趣记录和研究所有妇女生活的出版物,其方式超越了学术界,进入了整个社会(九)。写得好的文章继承了《边疆》的传统,对众多女性的经历进行了谨慎和尊重的处理,编辑和撰稿人显然认为,这些女性的故事绝对是“重要和有价值的”叙述。文章涉及从北卡罗来纳州磨坊工人的生活到巴勒斯坦难民营妇女的波动角色,再到蒙大拿州非法堕胎的历史,《妇女口述历史:前沿读者》为读者提供了各种各样的主题和方法可供选择。然而,这些选择是统一的,不仅因为支持它们的一贯优秀的研究,而且还因为它们引人入胜,完全可读的演示文稿。在本书的第一部分,“女性口述历史:资源部分”和容祖丽的文章“给美国华裔女性发声”为进行口述历史采访提供了宝贵的建议,包括样本问题和发放表格。本节和选集其他部分的其他文章探讨了其他方法论问题,包括创造性提问技术的需求(Strobel 47),记录他人话语和生活所涉及的伦理问题(Broughton 175),以及处理外部资金来源时必须解决的条件(Kesselman et al. 162;布劳顿177;Marchant 184)。这些在其他地方常常被迂腐的语言所掩盖的事情,在这些案例中被清晰而简洁地表达出来。这种对清晰度和质量研究的关注在其他文章中也很明显。例如,Anne M. Butler和Gerri W. Sorenson的《修补过去:学生和口述历史》详细描述了如何在课堂上有效地使用口述历史,并从教师和学生的角度展示了这些信息。其他文章,如多洛雷斯·德尔加多·伯纳尔的《基层领导重新定义:墨西哥裔口述历史和1968年东洛杉矶学校爆炸》,让·卡尔特隆·威廉姆斯的《家庭暴力和贫困:无家可归妇女的叙述》,以及哈丽特·雷伊和杰奎琳·Churilla的《向内看,向后看》。《回忆与生活回顾》一书探讨了通常被忽视的事件和群体,并令人信服地论证了口述历史的叙述具有社会学、政治和治疗价值。…
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Women's Oral History: The Frontiers Reader
Women's Oral History: The Frontiers Reader. Edited by Susan H. Armitage with Patricia Hart and Karen Weathermon. (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2002. Pp. xii + 392, introduction, photographs, illustrations, notes, index. $29.95 paper) At the conclusion of her article, "Digging Beneath the Surface: Oral History Techniques," Sherry Thomas writes, "Absolutely ordinary people matter and count, their stories are important, and we need all of their stories" (60). Thomas's statement could well serve as the underlying credo for the anthology Women's Oral History: The Frontiers Reader. Since its founding in 1975, the thrice-yearly Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies has been regarded as a publication interested in recording and examining the lives of all women in ways which reach beyond academia and into the community at large (ix). This collection of well-selected, well-researched, and well-written essays carries on the Frontiers tradition in its careful and respectful treatment of the experiences of a multiplicity of women whose stories the editors and contributors obviously believe are narratives which definitely "matter and count." With articles concerning everything from the life of a North Carolina millworker to the fluctuating roles of Palestinian camp women to the history of illegal abortions in Montana, Women's Oral History: The Frontiers Reader offers readers a wide variety of topics and approaches from which to choose. The selections are unified, though, not just by the consistently fine research which supports them but also by their engaging, thoroughly readable presentations. In the first portion of the volume, the Women's Oral History: Resource Section and Judy Yung's article, "Giving Voice to Chinese American Women," provide valuable advice on conducting oral history interviews, including sample questions and release forms. Additional articles in this section and elsewhere in the anthology explore other methodological issues, including the need for creative questioning techniques (Strobel 47), the ethical concerns involved in recording the words and lives of others (Broughton 175), and the conditions that must be addressed when dealing with outside sources of funding (Kesselman et al. 162; Broughton 177; Marchant 184). Such matters, often obscured by pedantic language elsewhere, are expressed clearly and concisely in these cases. This concern for clarity and quality research is evident in other essays as well. Anne M. Butler and Gerri W. Sorenson's "Patching the Past: Students and Oral History," for instance, describes in detail how oral history can be effectively used in the classroom and presents this information from the viewpoints of both teacher and student. Other essays, such as Dolores Delgado Bernal's "Grassroots Leadership Reconceptualized: Chicana Oral Histories and the 1968 East Los Angeles School Blowouts," Jean Calterone Williams's "Domestic Violence and Poverty: The Narratives of Homeless Women," and Harriet Wrye and Jacqueline Churilla's "Looking Inward, Looking Backward: Reminiscence and the Life Review," explores events and groups which have been generally neglected and argues persuasively that the narratives that comprise oral histories have sociological, political, and therapeutic value. …
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