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12 - Giving voice to the community: digitizing Jeffco oral histories
- from Part 2 - Challenges
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- By Krystyna K. Matusiak, Assistant Professor in the Library and Information Science Program (LIS) at the University of Denver, Colorado., Padma Polepeddi, Public Services Manager of Lakewood and Edgewater Libraries in Jefferson County, Colorado., Allison Tyler, 2016 graduate of the Library and Information Science Program at the University of Denver, Colorado., Catherine Newton, 2015 graduate of the Library and Information Science Program at the University of Denver, Colorado., Julianne Rist, Assistant Director of Public Services for the Jefferson County Public Library and oversees the Jeffco Stories project.
- Edited by Henriette Roued-Cunliffe, Andrea Copeland
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- Book:
- Participatory Heritage
- Published by:
- Facet
- Published online:
- 08 June 2018
- Print publication:
- 31 January 2017, pp 117-128
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- Chapter
- Export citation
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Summary
ORAL HISTORIES PROVIDE a unique opportunity for the preservation of cultural heritage and community engagement by collecting life stories, documenting shared experience and giving voice to community members. Digital technologies have improved the process of recording oral histories and offer innovative methods for their organization, dissemination and archiving (Boyd, 2011). New means of discovery and distribution are available, granting new levels of access not only to born-digital recordings but also to older oral histories recorded on analogue media. Digitization both expands access to valuable first-hand accounts recorded in the past and addresses preservation concerns, since many analogue recordings were originally created on tapes that deteriorate and become fragile with time.
The digitization of oral history collections has been undertaken primarily by university and audiovisual archives with well-established digital infrastructures for hosting and preserving digital assets (Daniels, 2009; Stevens and Latham, 2009; Weig, Terry and Lybarger, 2007). Public libraries and small cultural heritage institutions engage less frequently in building digital collections of oral histories, due to their relative lack of technical expertise and the challenge of acquiring affordable content management systems and digital preservation solutions. Partnering with other institutions and collaborating with researchers and community stakeholders is one way of expanding access to oral history collections (McKether and Jeter, 2011).
This chapter presents a case study of Jeffco Stories, a collection of digitized oral histories created by the Jefferson County Public (JCP) Library in Colorado, in the USA. The project was created in collaboration with local historical societies and with the assistance of faculty and graduate students from the Library and Information Science (LIS) programme at the University of Denver, located in Denver, Colorado. The online collection, Jeffco Stories, currently includes 163 oral histories. It was recently migrated to open source content management software, Omeka, and is available at http://jeffcostories.omeka.net/. This chapter contributes to research on the digitization of oral histories at small and mid-sized cultural heritage institutions and is particularly relevant to librarians and archivists who are exploring access and preservation solutions for digital collections.
Oral history background
Oral history is a systematic way of collecting personal life stories and memories of historical and community events through recorded interviews (Ritchie, 2003). It is a recognized research method in history and the social sciences that acknowledges spoken memories as primary source materials.