Abstract

Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Notes 1 Thompson suggests the more overt links in Evans' work to that of folklore studies were reduced in the more critical work of subsequent oral historians of this period as such ‘folklore studies never escaped the stigma of amateurism’ (1988: 71–72). 2 There have arguably been much closer links, in the development of oral history, with the disciplines of sociology, anthropology, psychology and linguistics. 3 ‘Talking Landscapes: On Geography and the Practice of Oral History’, one-day symposium, sponsored by the AHRC, University of Exeter, 8 July 2004.

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