Program

XXII IOHA International Conference Schedule

 

 

Tuesday, July 25, 2023

Venue: FGV Cultural Center

Time: 9h30am-12pm

 

Opening Ceremony

Celso Castro (Director FGV CPDOC/Brazil)

David Beorlegui (President of IOHA/Spain)

 

 

Round Table 1:

Oral History in a digital and audiovisual world

Speakers:

Elizabeth Visser (University of Cape Town/South Africa)

Jun Oguro (Doshisha University/Japan)

Sumallya Mukhopadhyay (International Institute of Research and Studies/India)

Moderadora: Mayra Jucá (FGV CPDOC/Brazil)

 

Abstract: The theory and practice of Oral History are being affected by a series of ongoing technological changes, such as the intensification of computer devices, the digitalization of knowledge, and the omnipresence of images in social life. In view of the contemporary issues faced globally, the round table proposes to think about the ways of doing oral history in the face of the digital and imagetic challenges that arise in the first decades of the 21st century, based on different experiences and trajectories of researchers around the world.

 

 

Minibios:

Mayra Jucá:

PhD student at CPDOC - Center for The Research and Documentation of Contemporary Brazilian History, at Fundação Getúlio Vargas (FGV) in Rio de Janeiro, and multimedia creator. Teacher of "Documentary Film and New Media" at CPDOC Documentary Film School.

Elizabeth Visser:

PhD student in the Historical Studies department at the University of Cape Town, South Africa. Specialist in the theme of the South African post-apartheid reconciliation project.

Jun Oguro:

Jun Oguro is a professor specialized in journalism studies at Doshisha University, Kyoto, Japan, teaching News Writing & Editing. He accumulated his experience as a staff writer for more than thirteen years at the Mainichi Newspaper and Kyodo News. .

Sumallya Mukhopadhyay:

Sumallya Mukhopadhyay teaches English Literature at the School of Media Studies and Humanities, Manav Rachna International Institute of Research and Studies. His area of interest includes, among other things, the politics of dispossession in narratives related to the 1947 Partition of Bengal. He has been awarded the TATA Trusts – Partition Archive Research Grant (2021) and South Asia Speaks Fellowship (2022).

 

 

Workshop 1: Your metadata guide for the multiverse: a process and tools for use in any oral history project

Venue: Auditorium 921

Time: 2pm-4pm.

 

Organizers:

Lauren Kata, Natalie Milbrodt

 

 

Panel 1: Narratives in recorded interviews

Venue: Auditorium 922

Time: 2pm-4pm

 

Organizer: Felipe Reis Pompeu de Moraes

 

Presenters:

 

1. Felipe Reis Pompeu de Moraes. Script of the interview granted to the constituent Fabio José Feldmann.

2. Indranil Chakraborty. Abandoned labour: stories of laid-off sears workers and retirees.

3. Lavinia Snejana Costea and Liliana Mateescu-Suciu. Everyday life in Oral Histories of Roma in Romania.

4. Dietrix Jon Ulukoa Duhaylonsod; Pretenciana "Ciana" Rosario. The Lanchu (Ranch) project: an oral history project from the Mariana Islands of the Pacific.

 

 

 

Panel 2: Oral history and interdisciplinarities

Venue: Auditorium 1013

Time: 2pm-4pm

 

Organizer: Raúl Antonio Buendía Chavarría

 

Presenters:

 

1. Raúl Antonio Buendía Chavarría. Tempo/oralidad: reconstrucción de la experiencia del tiempo.

2. Jon Sewell. The meaning of work: creativity as labor.

3. Mariana Mejía. Territorios, identificaciones y narrativas en la península de Yucatán: los megaproyectos desde el trabajo fotográfico de Robin Canul.

 

 

 

Panel 3: Oral history and politics

 

Venue: Auditorium 1014

Time: 2pm-4pm

 

Organizer: Graciela Ruth Browarnik

 

1. Graciela Ruth Browarnik. Del panfleto al under estrategias de agitación y provocación con títeres en los ochenta alfonsinistas.

2. Mxolisi R. Mchunu. Women combatants: political bloody war in the Natal-Midlands in the 1980s and 1990s.

3. Hilda Hernández. Memorias campesinas de políticas neoliberales en el norte de México.

4. Paulo Jorge. Oral History in the study of the resistance against the Estado Novo in Portugal (1933-1974).

 

 

 

Panel 4: Oral history, arts, performances and sports

 

Venue: Auditorium 1027

Time: 2pm-4pm

 

Organizer: Vivian Fonseca

 

Presenters:

 

1. Vivian Fonseca. Oral history collections as sports heritage: notes from the project Memory of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games.

2. Ricardo Santhiago. “Like the flame of a candle that goes out”: contiguities between oral history and personal archives in the documentation of an artist’s trajectory.

3. Nelson Correia. Managing the legal, ethical and security risks of a dual-purpose oral history project involving multiple organizations: the experience of the 'Film Bang' project in Scotland.

4. Emma Harake. From home to gallery: personal objects as a vector for sharing authority.

 

 

Panel 5: Oral history and education

Venue: Auditorium 1028

Time: 2pm-4pm

 

Organizer: Fernanda Rollo

Presenters:

1. Fernanda Rollo. Who is in Gorongosa Park has everything to work.

2. Jocyleia Santana dos Santos. Oral history in the post-graduation course in education in Tocantins.

3. Ana Lúcia Guedes Pinto. Histories of reading and memory in research with teachers: records of formative paths of the teaching profession.

4. Christa Patricia Whitney. Processing for multilingual interviews.

 

 

Panel 6: Oral history, minorities, and social movements

 

Venue: Auditorium 921

Time: 4pm-6pm

 

Organizer: Marcos Montysuma

Presenters:

1. Marcos Montysuma. Recuerdos de las luchas de los trabajadores del caucho en Xapuri.

2. Alejandra Oberti. Entre la palabra y la emoción. Voces testimoniales de mujeres transgresoras.

3. Mireya Olvera Hernández. Casa Rafael Galván: memory space for the trade union history of the 20th century in Mexico.

4. Carlos I Hernandez. La influencia puertorriqueña en la Revolución Sandinista de Nicaragua.

 

 

 

Panel 7: Oral history, health, and pandemics

Venue: Auditorium 922

Time: 4pm-6pm

 

Organizer: Carla Simone Rodeghero

Presenters:

1. Carla Simone Rodeghero, Rodrigo de Azevedo Weimer. Oral history of the pandemic: remote interviews and ethical challenges.

2. Milene Gomes Ferreira. Research in oral history in the pandemic: reflections and developments.

3. Jiri Hlavacek. Changes in the emergency medical service system: Oral history with Czech paramedics (1952-2003).

4. Jana Wohlmuth Markupová, Miroslav Vaněk. From a crisis towards a longitudinal oral history? On oral-historical research in the times of the covid-19 pandemic .

 

 

 

 

Panel 8: Narratives in the recorded interviews

 

Venue: Auditorium1013

Time: 4pm-6pm

 

Organizer: Camilla Gomes

Presenters:

1. Camilla Gomes. IPHAN’s cultural heritage policies and the narrative of an interview.

2. Daniel Leão. Interviews in João Moreira Salles' cinema.

3. Tomoyo Nakao. The intergenerational trauma of POWs and visual oral history.

4. Vicente Bellver Loizaga. ‘Y viví los noventa con gran ilusión’: emociones y construcción de la subjetividad a través de la experiencia del Kasal Popular Flora (València, 1991-1996).

 

 

Panel 9: Oral history and digital humanities

 

Venue: Auditorium 1014

Time: 4pm-6pm

 

Organizer: Radmila Svarickova Slabakova

Presenters:

1. Radmila Svarickova Slabakova. Oral history, multimedia and museums of the Second World War.

2. Elizabeth Visser. “I have that clip here!”: the spectre of digital media in the construction and narration ff life histories.

3. Lucas Maceno Sales, Paula Yuri Shimonishi Lardo. Encounters and disagreements: a comparative analysis of oral history between Brazil and the United States in the digital age.

4. Florencia Ruiz Mendoza. Embodiment and intersubjectivity in the digital era: an epistemological approach about the practice of Oral History in 2022.

 

 

 

Panel 10: Oral history, migrations, and inequalities

Venue: Auditorium 1027

Time: 4pm-6pm

 

Organizer: Eriko Yamamoto

Presenters:

1. Eriko Yamamoto. Embracing humility and hope: oral histories of early Japanese fulbrighters.

2. Hibiki Takeda. Connections and conflicts of kinship between Japan and Korean peninsula: issues on the “grave” and worship for the ancestor.

3. Zeila Demartini, Issaka Maïnassara Bano. Actions of African immigrants as cultural mediators between Africa and Brazil – facing prejudices, building dialogues.

4. Valentina Siniego, Ana Laura Ramos Saslavsky. Primos: exilio, preguntas y silencios – reconstrucción de una memoria colectiva.

 

 

Panel 11: Oral history, gender, and sexualities

 

Venue: Auditorium 1028

Time: 4pm-6pm

 

Organizer: Arzu Ozturkmen

Presenters:

1. Arzu Ozturkmen. Bodily responses to everyday life in a Black Sea Town: narratives of women’s ways of moving.

2. Bruna Aparecida Gomes Coelho. “Las mujeres no están al margen”: la ampliación de la ocupación femenina en la samba carioca.

3. Tinne Claes. Public history, shared authority and the right of reply: experiences from an oral history project about sperm banks.

4. Antje Van Kerckhove. Interpreting silence in vaginismus sufferers’ narratives of sex.

 

Forum ABHO 1

Call for members of the Brazilian Association of Oral History to attend a plenary session.

ABHO Directors: Fernando Sossai and Juniele Rabêlo de Almeida

Coordination of the Oral History Collective Forum: Marta Rovai and Rogério Rosa

Venue: Auditorium 1027

Time: 6h30pm-9h30pm

 

 

Wednesday, July 26, 2023

 

Venue: Auditorium of Presidency of FGV (12º floor)

Time: 10am-12pm

 

Round Table 2 :

Paths of Oral History in Latin America

Speakers:

Marcos Montysuma (UFSC/Brazil)

María Patrícia Pensado (INHA/Mexico)

Rubén Kotler (UNT/Argentina)

Moderador: Gerardo Necoechea (INHA/Mexico)

 

Abstract: The pandemic implied a change in customs and practices in many aspects of the daily and professional lives of thousands of people. The transformation of professional habits conditioned by the pandemic calamity and the measures adopted by different governments about public health led to the need to incorporate new technologies in Oral History, in the areas of research, education, training, and dissemination. This panel will discuss experiences in Latin America on the "virtualization" to which oral historians have been impelled, which has resulted, in certain cases, in new and challenging incursions in this field.

 

 

Minibios:

Gerardo Necoechea:

Senior researcher at the Directorate of Historical Studies at the National Institute of Anthropology and History in Mexico. Full professor of graduate studies in History since 1984, at the National School of Anthropology and History. 

Marcos Montysuma:

PhD in History from the Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo (2003), with a postdoctoral degree at Universidade Nova de Lisboa/2017. He is currently associate professor IV at the Federal University of Santa Catarina.

María Patrícia Pensado:

PhD in Latin American Studies from the Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM). She is a researcher at the Dr. José Maria Luis Mora. Coordinator of the Oral History Seminar at the same Mexican institution.

Rubén Kotler:

Degree in History at the National University of Tucumán – UNT – Argentina (2002), PhD at the University of Salamanca, Spain (2013). Responsible for the oral history area of the UNT Historical Archive..

 

Workshop 2: Recording, management, preservation and diffusion of oral history interviews

Venue: Auditorium 307

Time: 2pm-4pm.

 

Organizer: Ninna Carneiro

 

 

Audiovisual Session 1 and 2

Venue: Auditorium 308

Time: 2pm-4pm.

 

Film: Innu minuennium.

Director: Damian Castro.

Country/Year/Duration: Canada, 2022, 13 min.

 

Film: April Revolution Photo

Director: Gabriel Cardoso, Maria Julia Andrade and Rodolfo Junqueira Fonseca

Country/Year/Duration: Brazil, 2022, 20min

 

Film: A Independência de Cabo Verde – uma entrevista com o comandante Pedro Pires

Director: Gabriel Cardoso and Helena Monahan

Country/Year/Duration: Brazil, 2022, 29 min.

 

 

Panel 12: Oral history, minorities, and social movements 

Venue: Auditorium 317

Time: 2pm-4pm

 

Organizer: Alessandra Izabel de Carvalho

 

Presenters:

 

1. Alessandra Izabel de Carvalho, Robson Laverdi, Evelyn Roberta Nimmo. Historia pública y oralidad en la presentación del proyecto Sistemas Tradicionales y Agroecológicos de la Yerba Mate em los Bosques de Araucaria al Programa SIPAM/FAO.

2. Aisha Bilkhair. Afro-Emirati: historical community, assimilated identity and socio- cultural influence.

3. Pilar Adriana Rey Hernández. Narrativas sobre la vivienda: el caso del multifamiliar de Tlatelolco.

4. María Concepción Martinez Omaña, Antonio Padilla. Memory of an educational experience: from student to rural teacher in the Normal Rural School of Mactumatzá, Chiapas, Mexico..

 

Panel 13: Oral history and digital humanities/ Narratives in recorded interviews

Venue: Auditorium 318

Time: 2pm-4pm.

 

Organizer: Leslie Joan McCartney

Presenters:

1. Leslie Joan McCartney. Creative solutions found to allow online access to the University of Alaska fairbanks Oral History collection.

2. Dalrun Kaldakvisl Eygerdardottir. Visual-verbal #MeToo stories of housekeepers.

3. Alistair Thompson. Researching family life: oral history archives and secondary analysis.

4. Tania Ocampo Saravia. La persistencia de la memoria: la historia oral y la construcción de nuevos archivos..

 

Panel 14: Narratives in recorded interviews

Venue: Auditorium 1014

Time: 2pm-4pm.

Organizer: Outi Fingerroos

Presenters:

1. Lenka Kratka. “I already forgot it.” Interpretation of incomplete narratives, “silence” in interviews.

2. Alice Beatriz da Silva Gordo Lang. ABHO and its history.

3. Marie Barešová. My greatest joy was a sold-out movie theatre: cinema employees in socialistic Czechoslovakia 1960–⁠⁠⁠1990.

 

Panel 15: Oral history, gender, and sexualities

 

Venue: Auditorium 1027

Time: 2pm-4pm.

 

Organizer: David Beorlegui

 

Presenters:

 

1. David Beorlegui. Un recorrido por los senderos de la memoria feminista en España y el País Vasco (1968-1986).

2. Alyn Gamble. A great place to meet: oral histories of LGBTQ+ members of a mutual aid addiction recovery facility.

3. Martha Norkunas. Creating feminist spaces: women imagine safe cities and towns.

4. Miren Llona. El tiempo de la subjetividad: los significados de ser mujer en el franquismo.

 

 

Panel 16: Oral history, arts, performances and sports

 

Venue: Auditorium 1028

Time: 2pm-4pm.

 

Organizer: Bernardo Buarque

 

Presenters:

1. Bernardo Buarque; Raphael Rajão. The unexpected in an interview archive:
José Sebastião Witter and the “Memories of Soccer” project at the
Museum of Sound and Image (MIS-São Paulo/Brazil)"
.

2. Elson de Assis Rabelo. El fotógrafo como archivista: la historia oral, las imágenes y la memoria de los movimientos negros contemporáneos en Bahia.

3. Joseph Plaster. Performing oral history in collaboration with black LGBTQ artists..

4. Helena Stringari Gonçalves. Analysis of a literary mapping study on Northern and Northeastern Santa Catarina (1969): life writing and its affiliations with literature..

 

Workshop 3: Workshopping the interview: plural perspectives on the core of oral historical practice.

 

Venue: Auditorium 307

Time: 4pm-6pm.

Organizers: Alejandro Guardado, Ayssa Yamaguti Norek, Jonathan Coulis and Thomas D. Rogers

 

Panel 17: Oral history and indigenous and Afro-diasporic communities

Venue: Auditorium 317

Time: 4pm-6pm.

 

Organizer: Andrea Casa Nova Maia

 

Presenters:

1. Alissa Rae Funderburk, Fanny Julissa Garcia. The role of narrator compensation in the case for reparations and restitution.

2. James R. Karmel. Oral history & the American civil rights era.

3. Philippe Denis. Searching for the voice of black religious men and women in interwar South Africa.

4. Wladimyr Sena Araújo, Andrea Casa Nova Maia. Orality and image among the Noke Ko´í (Katukina) of the Western Amazon..

 

 

Panel 18: Oral history and education

Venue: Auditorium 318

Time: 4pm-6pm.

 

Organizer: Andréa Cristina de Barros Queiroz

 

Presenters:

1. Andréa Cristina de Barros Queiroz. The creation of the oral history collection about professors who were expelled during the civil-military dictatorship at UFRJ.

2. Bjørn Enes. Oral history is intangible world heritage.

3. Fernanda Balzacchi de Moura Morais. “The open wound of the Brazilian community in Japan”: narratives on school evasion and juvenile delinquency in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

4. Ianna Torres Lustosa. Oral history and school culture in social networks: digital sources in the constitution of the history of educational institutions.

 

 

 

Panel 19: Oral history, migrations, and inequalities

 

Venue: Auditorium 1014

Time: 4pm-6pm.

 

Organizer: Daniela Garino

 

Presenters:

1. Daniela Garino. Willkommen! Los alemanes en Uruguay a través de la Historia Oral.

2. Saori Kato. Amami (Japanese) Brazilian immigration history and identity formations.

3. Malgorzata Łukianow. Memory at war: oral histories of the Russian-Ukrainian conflict..

4. Silva Sevlian. Final frontier of parenting: repatriating to the homeland..

 

 

Panel 20: Oral history, minorities, and social movements

 

Venue: Auditorium 1027

Time: 4pm-6pm.

 

Organizer: Gerardo Necoechea

 

Presenters:

 

1.  Alicia de los Ríos Merino, Alonso Getino and Gerardo Necoechea. Student protest and repression: 10 June 1971, Mexico..

2. Ana Laura Ramos Saslavsky and Rocío Ruiz Lagier. La reconstrucción de la historia familiar en la segunda generación del exilio argentino: retos, complejidades y dificultades..

3. Rubén Isidoro Kotler. La formación del Sindicato de Empleados y Obreros de la Universidad Nacional de Tucumán durante el primer peronismo. .

4. Pilar Dominguez. Trayectorias transnacionales de militancia de la segunda generación del exilio republicano.

 

 

Panel 21: Oral history and politics

 

Venue: Auditorium 1028

Time: 4pm-6pm.

 

Organizer: Marieta de Moraes Ferreira

 

Presenters:

 

1.  Luiz Henrique Blume. "The dictatorship did not come around here": disputes for the memory in Ilhéus, Bahia, 1964-1985..

2. Yu Cui. Population aging, local journalism, and democracy: oral history of Chinese-ethnic senior citizens in NYC.

3. Gabriel Amato Bruno de Lima. A picture of us hanging on the principal’s wall: remembering contemporary student activism through visual culture and oral history.

4. Alessandro Casellato. Archivos orales entre la historiografía y el activismo: la experiencia de la Asociación Italiana de Historia Oral..

5. Antonio Mariano e Philippe Guedon. Cesar Maia and the student movement in the military dictatorship..

 

 

General Meeting - IOHA

Call for members of the International Oral History Association to attend a plenary session.

Venue: Auditorium of Presidency of FGV (12º floor)

Time: 6h30pm-9h30pm

 

Thursday, July 27, 2023

Venue: Auditorium of Presidency of FGV (12º floor)

Time: 10am-12pm

 

Round Table 3:

Oral History and Digital Humanities: methodological challenges

Speakers:

Alissa Rae Funderburk (Jackson State University/EUA)

Leslie Joan McCartney (Alaska Fairbanks University/EUA)

Outi Fingerroos (Jyväskylä University/Finland)

Chair: Miao Tian (National Libray/China)

 

Abstract: The round table discusses the potential contributions of the Digital Humanities in Oral History activities. The proposal is to debate the transformations and innovations of the technological resources of this emerging area, such as the data mining system, when applied to audiovisual recordings and transcriptions of interviews. The technical aspects of this intersection are analyzed in articulation with the theoretical issues and methodological challenges of the treatment of oral sources.

 

 

Minibio:

 

Alissa Rae Funderburk:

Graduated in Anthropology and Master in Oral History from Columbia University. With the Margareth Walker Center in Mississippi, she coordinates Oral History Archives for the preservation, interpretation, and dissemination of African-American culture and history.

Leslie Joan McCartney:

Associate professor and curator of Oral History at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, in the United States. She coordinates the Jukebox Program, for Oral History archives. Member of the IOHA Board.

Miao Tian:

Researcher at the Department of Education, National Library of China, Beijing. He is a director of documentaries in Oral History. Member of the IOHA Board.

Outi Fingerroos:

Professor in Ethnology at the University of Jyväskylä, studies issues related to oral history methodology and war migration. She is the founder of the Finnish Oral History Network FOHN and past vice-president of the International Oral History Association (IOHA).

 

Workshop 4: Digital diasporas – research methods for public history explorations

 

Venue: Auditorium 307

Time: 2pm-4pm.

Organizers: Anita Lucchesi, Dominique Santana and Michael Frisch

 

Audiovisual Session 3

Venue: Auditorium 308

Time: 2pm-4pm.

 

Film: Nosso Sagrado

Director: Gabriel Barbosa

Country/Year/Duration: Brazil, 2017, 31min

 

Film: Nossos mortos têm voz

Director: Gabriel Barbosa

Country/Year/Duration: Brazil, 2018, 28min

 

 

Panel 22: Oral history, minorities, and social movements 

 

Venue: Auditorium 317

Time: 2pm-4pm.

 

Organizer: Fabian Serejo Santana

Presenters:

1. Fabian Serejo Santana. Think right: engagement and social transformation in Paraíso do Tocantins (Brazil) in times of pandemic.

2. Subhasree Ghosh. Myriad facets of oral narratives: East Bengali migrants and construction of ‘home’.

3. Adriana Kapała. Oral history – oral community: role of the community archives in Polish narratives

4. Alejandro Guardado. De ahí salió la solidaridad: a liberationist history of reflecting and responding in late 20th century Oaxaca.

 

Panel 23: Oral history and interdisciplinarities

Venue: Auditorium 318

Time: 2pm-4pm.

 

Organizer: Bradley H Wright

 

Presenters:

 

1. Bradley H Wright. Recent history of the Rio Santiago, industrial contamination, and popular organizing for community health in Jalisco, Mexico.

2. Bruno Capilé, Cristiane Mendes Netto, Patrícia Falco Genovez, Lise Fernanda Sedrez. Redes de solidaridad en tiempos de inundación del Río Doce: Governador Valadares, Minas Gerais, Brazil.

3. Jun Oguro. How TV social documentaries have been produced in Japan? The case of "Sediments of Memories" (2017), which collected testimonies of war perpetrators and victims.

4. Sumallya Mukhopadhyay. Learning to affectively listen in a digital age.

 

 

Panel 24: Oral history and interdisciplinarities

 

Venue: Auditorium 1014

Time: 2pm-4pm.

 

Organizer: Verônica Sales Pereira

Presenters:

1. Verônica Sales Pereira. Mediat(is)ed pasts: the place of the documentary as a repository of the urban memory in the labour and housing movement..

2. Jana Wohlmuth Markupová. Oral history and historical biography: best of both worlds?.

3. Lucas Gabriel Pereira da Silva. Entre cuentos: la participación de la oralidad en la construcción del mito Ataíde..

 

Panel 25: Various themes

 

Venue: Auditorium 1027

Time: 2pm-4pm..

 

Organizer: Gabriel Cardoso

Presenters:

1. Ketlyn Cristina da Silva Alves. Conceptions of oral history: reflections on a set of interviews from the Univille's oral history laboratory collection (1980-2000)”..

2. Helena Taborda Monahan. Observing traces of oral and art history in Ndyuka Maroon Audiovisual productions..

3. Weslley dos Santos Graper. Oral The Memory Of Integralism In The City Of Joinville In Interviews Of The Univille's Oral History Laboratory (Lho) Produced In The Decade Of 1980..

4. Amy Starecheski. The oral history interview as a space for history-making: recreating a usable past in the early months of the covid pandemic..

 

Workshop 5: 30 years of interviews: the experience of the Nucleus of Oral History Studies at USP

 

Venue: Auditorium 1028

Time: 2pm-4pm

Organizer: Marcela Boni

 

Workshop 6: Project in applied oral history: how to do, how to think

 

Venue: Auditorium 307

Time: 4pm-6pm.

Organizers: Lucas Maceno Sales, Leandro Seawright

 

Workshop 7: Taller Historia Oral – estudantes y formación docente de primaria

 

Venue: Auditorium 308

Time: 4pm-6pm.

Organizer: María Stella Arrieta

 

Workshop 8: Las prácticas de la historia oral en ámbitos no académicos

Venue: Auditorium 1013

Time: 4pm-6pm.

 

Organizers:

Rubén Isidoro Kotler, Adriana Echezuri, Silvana Luverá

 

Audiovisual Session 4

Venue: Auditorium 317

Time: 4pm-6pm.

 

Film: In absentia: the lost ones of America’s/Motown’s Revolution(s)

Director: Joyce-Zoe Farley

Country/Year/Duration: EUA, 2020

 

Film: We the Cimarrons: oral history and resistance in the Yurumangui, Colombia

Director: Emma Louise Christopher

Country/Year/Duration: Colombia

 

Audiovisual Session 5

Venue: Auditorium 318

Time: 4pm-6pm.

 

Film: Learning Arara language with Txakira (Arara Community Cachoeira Seca, Pará)

Director: Ana Maria Mauad

Year/Country/Duration: Brazil, 2019

 

Film: Relatos y memorias orales del Norlitoral de la Patagonia Aysén – Chile.

Director: Patricia Juanita Carrasco Urrutia.

Year/Country/Duration: Chile

 

Audiovisual Session 6

Venue: Auditorium 1014

Time: 4pm-6pm.

 

Film: Dialogues over Pira.

Director: Mayra Jucá

Year/Country/Duration: Brasil

 

Panel 26: Various themes

 

Venue: Auditorium 1027

Time: 4pm-6pm.

 

Organizer: Miao Tian

Presenters:

1. Miao Tian. Preserving collective memory of ethnic minorities with a very small population: an interdisciplinary work of oral history and oral tradition..

2. Sarah Foss. Oral histories of community organizing around Oklahoma’s anti-immigrant legislation..

3. Alissa Rae Funderburk, Micah H. Mizukami, Dietrix Jon Ulukoa Duhaylonsod. Translation and transcription: destandardizing the archive..

 

Panel 27: Oral history and environment

 

Venue: Auditorium 1028

Time: 4pm-6pm.

 

Organizer: Mark Cave

Presenters:

1. Javier A. Arce-Nazario. More than H20: exploring the biophysical and social dimensions..

2. Mark Alexander Cave. What makes us feel: using oral history to explore our relationship with wildlife..

3. Stephen M. Sloan. Oral History and the environment..

 

Forum ABHO 2

Call for members of the Brazilian Association of Oral History to attend a plenary session.

ABHO Directors: Fernando Sossai and Juniele Rabêlo de Almeida

Coordination of the Oral History Collective Forum: Marta Rovai and Rogério Rosa

Venue: Auditorium 1027

Time: 6h30pm-9h30pm

 

Friday, July 28, 2023

 

Venue: Auditorium of Presidency of FGV (12º floor))

Time: 10am-12pm

 

Round Table 4:

History and memories of IOHA: Towards 30 years of Association

Speakers:

Alistair Thomson (Monash University/Australia)

Marieta de Moraes Ferreira (UFRJ/Brazil)

Silva Dunduro (Mozambique)

Chair: David Beorlegui (President of IOHA/Spain) and Pilar Domínguez (Universidad Las Palmas/Spain)

 

Abstract: The table proposes a reflection by former presidents of the IOHA, from different continents, who were at the forefront of the creation in 1996 and participated in the consolidation of the entity in recent decades. The approaching thirtieth anniversary of the foundation of the Association is thus an opportunity to take stock of the experiences shared along the way and to project the challenges that will be faced in the coming years to the continuity of the practices and the renewal of the association of Oral History on an international scale.   

 

Minibio:

 

Alistair Thomson:

Professor of History at Monash University in Australia. He is the current president of the Australian Oral History Association. He specializes in 20th century British history and the social and cultural history of war. He was president of the IOHA between 2006 and 2008.

Marieta de Moraes:

Professor at the History Institute of UFRJ (Brazil) and editor of FGV. Specialist in History of the Brazilian Republic, with emphasis in History Theory, Historiography, Oral History, Memory and Political History. She chaired the IOHA between 2000 and 2002..   

Pilar Domínguez:

Historian, professor at the University of Las Palmas, Grand Canary (Spain), attached to the University Institute of Textual Analysis and Applications. Specialist in contemporary Spanish social and political history. She chaired the IOHA between 2008 and 2010.

Silva Dunduro

Minister of Culture and Tourism in Mozambique. One of those responsible for the introduction of Oral History in the African country, in 2010. Master's in Political History and Cultural Property from FGV CPDOC.