F/V 455-002--------ALC 440-001 (Abe' Mark Nornes; amnornes@umich.edu)

Dialogue of Violence: Cinema in WWII's Pacific Theater

The Oral History Assignment

 

Purpose


Ground Rules

This assignment is probably more complex than you imagine. As a historian you have many decisions to make before and after you conduct your oral interview. Reading this carefully should prepare you for what to expect.

It is due on March 17; there is no limit on length, but a minimum of 10 pages is required.

In addition to this you must include a private "Afterthoughts" section, minimum 2 pages, as described below. Grades will be marked down 1/3 per day of lateness (including weekend days).

This is not a simple transcription of a conversation. You will have to edit and annotate the final text. The annotation can be footnotes, parenthetical remarks like Studs Terkel uses, an introduction or conclusion or both. Your annotations can be restricted to the questions and remarks you make at the scene, and can also be added after the fact. They can be in a third person or first person voice, personal or professional in tone. These are some of the many decisions you will have to make.

These oral histories will be put on the internet at a site devoted to this class. Make sure the person knows this, and get permission from him or her in writing (hand this in on March 17). Ask for any photographs of them (present-day and/or wartime) that we could include with their history; it doesn't cost us to scan these for the internet, so any number of photographs is fine. Keep in mind that anything can be converted into an image for the web, so if certain objects or documents come up in your conversation you might ask if you could borrow them so we can include images of them with the text. This can include motion pictures (Hollywood or home movies), as well as objects that are not flat. If you want, you could even videotape your interview and conceptualize a way to integrate short quicktime excerpts into your piece-on the web an oral history has the potential to be truly oral! If you plan to use images that we must digitize, please alert me ahead of time; we should try to do this before March 17 if possible.

When you hand in the oral history you must include both paper and electronic versions. As for the latter, Microsoft Word for Macintosh is preferable. If you use another word processor see if you can save the document as a MS Word file. If this is not possible, save it as text and give it to me on floppy disk or by email. I will return your disks. I will do the html programming for WWW, but you are welcome to do your own if you wish. I will keep a copy on our class site, but you are welcome to put it on your own home page as well.

When you sit down to talk, do a test to make sure your tape recorder is actually working. Never trust it, and always bring extra batteries!

Budget your time: 1) to find a subject, 2) to formulate strong questions, 3) to transcribe, and 4) to edit.


Strategies (in no particular order)

Transcribing

Be aware of your powerful mediating role in this oral history. As you can see, you will have a plethora of decisions to make from the get go. What do you exclude? How do you convert speech into writing? Do you include something very important to that person that seems trivial to you? Do you correct grammar? Do you faithfully transcribe dialects or forms of speech other than so-called "standard English"? Do you include your questions or not? Do you forground your own presence and mediation or suppress it? Speech can often be fragmentary and rambling, so how do you structure the oral history-"cut and paste" or preserve the natural flow of the original conversation? How do you deploy the various devices of written language to produce specific effects: italics, boldface, and punctuation like "quote marks"? How might you use (parentheses) to describe body language or add commentary? Note what choices Terkel has made, and how that has affected your reading of the original verbal storytelling. If you interview someone in a foreign language, these issues are all compounded by the problem of translation. Be self-conscious about how your editorial decisions as historian (and your subject's answers as well) are affected by the fact that this will be made available globally via the internet.

Afterthoughts

After preparing your oral history, record your thoughts about the entire process, about oral history as a form of history writing. How will you read oral histories (or history relying heavily on oral interviews) now that you have done it yourself? These afterthoughts may be personal in tone, but must be thoroughly thought out. They could even be in the form of a journal if you like. In any case, I suggest you keep notes starting today and start working on this as you prepare. This part will be private, read only by me and returned to you with your grade.

Afterthoughts length: at least two pages/no maximum.