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Getting Started with Oral History

Tips and tools to help you plan and implement an oral history project

Oral History at the BPL

The Oral History Manual

This book provides a simple roadmap for oral history practitioners.

Say It Forward

This guide offers strategies for creating justice-driven oral history projects.

A Guide to Oral History and the Law

This book goes into detail about best practices and legal policies surrounding oral history.

Oral History and Communities of Color

This book explores how oral history can be used for a number of purposes in communities of color.

Mental Health Resources

Sometimes, sharing or hearing memories can cause feelings of discomfort or pain for narrators or interviewers participating in an oral history project. Please remember to take care of yourself as you engage in this process. If you or someone you know could benefit from some professional support, please consider the resources below:

Please use these resources if you need immediate help:

Massachusetts Behavioral Health Help Line: 833-773-2445

National Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: 988

Disaster Distress Helpline: 1-800-985-5990

The Trevor Project: 1-866-488-7386

Trans Lifeline: 877-565-8860

LGBT National Hotline: 888-843-4564

Contact Us

This Research Guide has been compiled by staff at the Boston Public Library and community partners. Links are verified and fact-checked on a regular basis, but may change at any time. We welcome your feedback! Reach out to communityhistory@bpl.org.

Getting Started with Oral History

Introduction

Welcome to the Oral History Libguide! This guide offers tips and tools to help you plan and implement an oral history project. We designed this guide to support oral historians of all experience levels.

Here you will find:

  • An overview of oral history best practices and principles

  • Information for interviewers to consider before, during and after an interview

  • Information for participants (also known as narrators or interviewees) throughout the interview process

  • Release form examples and other documentation materials used in an oral history project

  • A glossary of common terms used in oral history

  • Additional resources to support you in your oral history journey

Note that there’s no one-size-fits-all approach to oral history; flexibility is key as you approach your project. As such, this research guide should be considered a helpful resource, and not a strict set of rules.

This guide can also complement the BPL Oral History Backpack, which contains a portable audio recorder, guidebook, and other helpful tools for an oral history project. Starting May 20, 2023, BPL Oral History Backpacks can be checked out at participating Boston Public Library branches. For backpack availability, check the catalog record linked below.

What is oral history?

Oral history is a method of conducting historical research through interviews. It is also a way to gather, preserve and interpret the voices and memories of people and communities relating to past events. The term "oral history" can refer to the act of creating a recorded testimony. It can also refer to the materials produced in an interview (whether it is audio, video, or written). 

To gather and preserve information about the past, oral historians interview narrators. Oral history doesn’t just record stories about the past. It allows us to place people’s lived experiences within larger social and historical contexts. Narrators tell these stories through the lens of memory, often many years later. These memories give us a deeper understanding of our shared past, and how we sort through that past in the present day.

A successful oral history project rests upon a relationship between the interviewer and the narrator. The interviewer offers guided questions based on research and careful preparation. The interviewer also records and preserves the interview. Narrators shape the interview by sharing insights and experiences that they believe to be meaningful to the project. The interview process can feel fluid and conversational. But an oral history is grounded in thoughtful planning and follow-through of a process that has been agreed upon before recording.
 

Adapted from Oral History Association “Oral History: Defined,” 2020 and "OHA Principles and Best Practices," 2018.

Who can do oral history?

You don’t need to be a professional historian or recording artist to create an oral history. Whether you're brand new to oral history or have many interviews under your belt, you can do oral history. Your oral history project and scope can be as specific or as wide-ranging as you like, and this guide has lots of tips to help you along the way. 

A Brief History of Oral History

Oral history is likely as old as storytelling and language themselves. Many cultures have used oral history to share knowledge before audio recording. For example, Indigenous communities, such as the Massachusett tribe, use oral history to pass down lessons, world views, and ancestral knowledge. Oral history became increasingly centered around technology with the invention of portable recorders in the 1930s. It later gained a larger following in colleges during the 1960s. Feminists, working class and LGBTQ activists, racial minorities, and other historically marginalized communities have also embraced oral history as a way of recording stories that were long neglected by academic and cultural institutions. With recording technology becoming more widespread, oral history is more accessible today than ever before!

Adapted from "Introduction: The Evolution of Oral History" The Oxford Handbook of Oral History, edited by Donald A. Ritchie, 2012. Image source: Douglas DeNatale and Carl Fleischhauer, Yvonne Legasse at her apartment, Lowell, Massachusetts,1987, Library of Congress.

Thanks and Attribution

Thank you!

This libguide was developed by Community History staff and interns at the BPL. This guide was informed by the Boston Research Center's Oral History Toolkit, along with guidance from the Oral History Association and our colleagues at Princeton University Library, Georgia Public Library Service, Door County Library, and Kentucky Historical Society. We thank them for sharing their experiences and insights about their own circulating oral history kits and guidance, and invite you to explore their work and projects below: