College of Liberal and Fine Arts
Permanent URI for this communityhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12588/142
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Browsing College of Liberal and Fine Arts by Department "History"
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Item Black Lives Matter, So Do Their Voices: Centering the Black Experience in Oral History Projects(2022-09-04) Dixon, DanieleItem Graduate Students Reflect on Oral History(2022-06) Lopez, Cristobal; Beckelheimer, TeresaItem Journalism Vs. Oral History Podcast(2022) Golden, Kaleb Errin; Hasewinkle, AdamItem Oral History and Memory(2022) Dixon, Daniele; Reichman, LizItem An Oral History Introduction: Women and War Interviews(2023-08) Gardner, Kirsten; Martinez, Valerie A.Item Oral History Planning Guide(The University of Texas at San Antonio, 2023) Women and War TeamItem Sample Interview Volunteer Form(The University of Texas at San Antonio, 2023) Women and War TeamItem Short Guide to Interviewing Techniques(The University of Texas at San Antonio, 2023) Women and War TeamItem Short Tips for Day of Interview(The University of Texas at San Antonio, 2023) Women and War TeamItem The Transatlantic Slave Trade and the Foundation of the Kingdom of Galinhas in Southern Sierra Leone, 1790–1820(Cambridge University Press, 2021-11-02) Felipe-Gonzalez, JorgeIn the early nineteenth century a centralized political entity, the Galinhas kingdom, emerged in southernmost Sierra Leone. Based on sources from Cuban, British, American, Spanish, and Sierra Leonean archives, this article examines the factors accounting for the emergence and consolidation of Galinhas. I argue that the postabolitionist (1808) redeployment of North Atlantic slave trading actors, networks, routes, and spaces, particularly the connection with Cuba and resources from the island, created the conditions for Galinhas's commercial growth and the centralization of its political power. I then problematize the relationship between warfare, the Atlantic slave trade, and state making. During the foundation of a predatory state, before a slaving and political frontier existed, wars were detrimental to trade. When warfare and commerce — or any social activity — coexisted in the same physical space, the interdependent balance between them, which supported the slave trade itself, was disrupted. After the end of the war, political stability boosted slave trading operations.Item Trauma, Memory, and Oral History: How to Proceed(2022-08) Reichman, ElizabethI would like to present a brief overview of the development of oral history as a separate discipline with emphasis on how Holocaust studies have influenced the approach to traumatic testimonies. My discussion will also explore the reliability of oral history and the deeper meaning inherent in memory. Finally, I will offer suggestions to the student preparing to interview a narrator who may describe traumatic events.Item Women and War Oral History Project Roundtable: An Oral History of Oral History(2022-04-25) Lopez, Cristobal; Beckelheimer, TeresaThe purpose of this roundtable is to discuss key topics in conducting oral history interviews with women veterans of all branches of the military, from the pre-interview phase through the passing of a veteran’s oral history collection to an archive housed with the UTSA John Peace Library.Item Women and War Transcription Guide(The University of Texas at San Antonio, 2023) Women and War Team