


Disappearing Sounds
Blog: Disappearing Sounds It is easy to forget that oral history practices developed differently in different countries. The U.S. model – or, more precisely, the model developed by Allan Nevins, Louis Starr, and Elizabeth Mason at Columbia University in the 1950s...
Final Offer Selection in Manitoba
Blog: Final Offer Selection in Manitoba While it is common for some to view the labour movement as a monolith, in practice this is rarely the case. One of the more pronounced examples of the splits that can happen within the labour movement occurred when the...
Canadians Do Oral History?
Blog: Canadians Do Oral History? Oral historians in the English-speaking world have been rewarded with a number of excellent compendiums over the past few decades, including an anthology, a reader, and two handbooks. Yet, to the international readership of these...
Oral History and the Common Good
Blog: Oral History and the Common Good In my last blog post, I wrote about the Oral History Centre’s motto of “democratizing history.” Today, I continue this idea by asking how the notion of the Common Good can help us understand oral history’s democratizing...