Abstract

Oral history is a field of research that is uniquely positioned to thrive at a time of intense public and scholarly interest in sharing personal stories. Unlike ethnography, oral history has not found an institutional home in North American universities given its often fraught relationship to the history discipline. History is typically grounded in distance—the more the better; whereas oral history is based on the idea of closing distance by learning with the communities we study. Yet oral history is thriving in Canadian universities in the in-between spaces of collaborative cross-disciplinary projects and research centres. After introducing readers to the situation in Canada, the article explores the ways that oral history and storytelling have come together at Concordia University’s Centre for Oral History and Digital Storytelling (COHDS). Oral history is a creative practice, and one of its great strengths is its openness to a diversity of approaches. This can be seen in the range of research-creation projects undertaken by oral historians at Concordia in the classroom and in our communities. Montreal Life Stories was the most ambitious of these projects, recording the life stories of 500 genocide survivors and integrating their stories in a range of public outcomes such as theatre plays, online digital stories, art installations, radio programming, documentary and animated film, and a museum exhibition. The article ends with consideration of the online Living Archives of Rwandan Genocide Exiles and Survivors as well as the new digital tools under development.

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