This article involves a study of the narrative of a Second World War Resistance member by means of an interview in which the interviewer explicitly inserts the historical context by selecting the topics for discussion and asking critical questions. The interview deals with three periods: the Wartime period; the First Wave of Reprisals; and the Second Wave of Reprisals. The analyses show that the interviewee's first and second-level positionings shift along with changes in historical period and that they mirror the general historical image of the Resistance. These different positionings are highly consistent in themselves and this consistency is also present on the third level of positioning, because of the interviewee's fairly muted style o...
For this study, twelve life stories of alumni from the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam, who were enr...
Abstract How do we remember? What do we remember? How does the memory change over time? These are th...
This article brings a reflection about some contemporary problems of oral history. The author studie...
Oral history has changed its focus since the 1970s. It is still an important method of recovering ne...
In this article, I inquire into the life of a single Holocaust survivor in order to give a “thick de...
In this article, we study the diachronic (re)construction of repeated WWII-testimonies. Specifically...
One of the main objections against oral history interviews is their retrospective character – the di...
This essay signals a departure from conventional models for the oral history interview to allow the ...
Big stories are typically characterized by a high degree of reflexivity, which results in the constr...
What makes oral history different from any other history research method is the fact that a historia...
In this chapter, I explore the “best practices” and core values with which researchers should align ...
Many participants in conflict have experienced it through mediations of meaning between languages, a...
The composure of subjective identities in the oral history interview has been the subject of recent ...
This article investigates the identity constructions of a former hooligan in two repeated narratives...
We study the life story of a former SS Leibstandarte soldier and we focus on the way the narrator de...
For this study, twelve life stories of alumni from the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam, who were enr...
Abstract How do we remember? What do we remember? How does the memory change over time? These are th...
This article brings a reflection about some contemporary problems of oral history. The author studie...
Oral history has changed its focus since the 1970s. It is still an important method of recovering ne...
In this article, I inquire into the life of a single Holocaust survivor in order to give a “thick de...
In this article, we study the diachronic (re)construction of repeated WWII-testimonies. Specifically...
One of the main objections against oral history interviews is their retrospective character – the di...
This essay signals a departure from conventional models for the oral history interview to allow the ...
Big stories are typically characterized by a high degree of reflexivity, which results in the constr...
What makes oral history different from any other history research method is the fact that a historia...
In this chapter, I explore the “best practices” and core values with which researchers should align ...
Many participants in conflict have experienced it through mediations of meaning between languages, a...
The composure of subjective identities in the oral history interview has been the subject of recent ...
This article investigates the identity constructions of a former hooligan in two repeated narratives...
We study the life story of a former SS Leibstandarte soldier and we focus on the way the narrator de...
For this study, twelve life stories of alumni from the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam, who were enr...
Abstract How do we remember? What do we remember? How does the memory change over time? These are th...
This article brings a reflection about some contemporary problems of oral history. The author studie...