Oral historians have drawn upon different intellectual disciplines-including history, sociology, anthropology, psychology, and linguistics-to better understand the creation and interpretation of memory, and they have worked alongside museum curators, artists, and media professionals to create public histories that combine sound, image, and text. Researchers from universities, schools, community groups, and development projects have all proved to be adept practitioners. The most distinctive contribution of oral history has been to record the experiences and perspectives of groups of people who might otherwise have been hidden from history. ![]() Since the late 1940s, oral history has transformed the practice of contemporary history in many countries. ![]() Williams (Eds.), SAGE Research Methods Foundations. Thomson, Alistair, and Robert Perks (2019). "Oral History" SAGE Research Methods Foundations, Edited by Paul Atkinson, et al. In: Paul Atkinson, ed., SAGE Research Methods Foundations. "Oral History." In SAGE Research Methods Foundations, edited by Paul Atkinson, Sara Delamont, Alexandru Cernat, Joseph W.
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