A manual addressed to students rather than to teachers or
researchers,
Oral History: An Introduction for Students is
unique among the "how to" books in the field, adapting some of the
best methods of group oral history projects to the needs of
individual students. Useful in courses devoted entirely to oral
history, the book also addresses the wider audience of students who
may choose to do oral research in the context of otherwise
traditional courses. The emphasis is on humanistic, imagininative,
and intellectual challenge for students in integrating oral
accounts with written documents. Only by achieving such
flexibility, argues the author, can oral history fully realize its
potential as a learning and teaching technique.
A signficant contribution to theory and methodology as well as an
introductory manual, this book will be of interest to professional
oral history researchers and those individual scholars interested
in adding oral history to their research techniques. James Hoopes
has explored the writings of sociology and communications
specialists in order to present a richly detailed and helpful
analysis of the interview situation from a transactional point of
view. Of particular interest is the section of the book devoted to
the ways in which oral history can be related to other areas of
research such as biography and family history and to the broader
fields of cultural and social history.
Hoopes' s central theme is that oral history, whether viewed
primarily as a learning or research technique, can fulfill its
promise as an important and humanistic resource only if it becomes
part of general historical study wherever it is applicable.