• About
    • Contact
    • Donate
    • General FAQs
    • Faculty and Staff
    • Current Students
    • Our Alumni
    • Advisory Board
    • Applying
    • Tuition and Aid
    • B.A./M.A. Option
    • Student FAQs
    • General Information
    • Degree Requirements and Courses
    • Registration
    • Academic Resources
    • Oral History Works
    • Annual Student Exhibitions
    • News
    • Jeffrey H. Brodsky Oral History Award
    • Calendar
    • Thursday Evening Event Series
    • Oral History Training Workshops
    • Events Archive
    • Workshop Equity Budgeting Policy
  • Hire Our Alumni
Menu

Oral History Master of Arts

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number

Your Custom Text Here

Oral History Master of Arts

  • About
    • About
    • Contact
    • Donate
    • General FAQs
  • People
    • Faculty and Staff
    • Current Students
    • Our Alumni
    • Advisory Board
  • Admissions
    • Applying
    • Tuition and Aid
    • B.A./M.A. Option
    • Student FAQs
  • Student Resources
    • General Information
    • Degree Requirements and Courses
    • Registration
    • Academic Resources
  • Explore Our Work
    • Oral History Works
    • Annual Student Exhibitions
    • News
    • Jeffrey H. Brodsky Oral History Award
  • Events
    • Calendar
    • Thursday Evening Event Series
    • Oral History Training Workshops
    • Events Archive
    • Workshop Equity Budgeting Policy
  • Hire Our Alumni

Journeys Through Spaces: Spoken, Written, Physical and Virtual

May 18, 2020 Admin

In this blogpost, inspired by Carlin Zia’s March 5th OHMA presentation on her book “Uncertain Journeys,” Lisa R. Cohen reflects on the fluid nature of shared memories in different spaces - traveling back and forth between spoken, written, physical and even, increasingly, the virtual world.

Read More
In Workshop Reflections Tags oral history, listening, memory, Storytelling, AI, language
1 Comment

Hug Your Plant! and Other Self-Care Tips for Oral Historians in Lockdown

May 18, 2020 Admin
A desk in front of a window. It’s sunset. The window looks out onto mountains. On the desk there are books, notebooks, postcards and a pencil case.Photo Credit: Eleonora Anedda

A desk in front of a window. It’s sunset. The window looks out onto mountains. On the desk there are books, notebooks, postcards and a pencil case.

Photo Credit: Eleonora Anedda

Ted Kerr’s wise words inspired OHMA student Eleonora Anedda to reflect on the responsibilities of oral historians in times of crisis. Not so much on their duty towards others, but their obligations towards themselves. This piece will examine much needed self care habits that can be incorporated in our lockdown routines.

Read More
In Workshop Reflections Tags oral history, listening, memory, Storytelling, AI, language
Comment

Uncovering Thyself: Identity Politics & Oral History

May 14, 2020 Admin
Illustration of a ghost (the oral historian) holding a microphone next to a person sitting down.

Illustration of a ghost (the oral historian) holding a microphone next to a person sitting down.

In this blog post, current OHMA student Marina Labarthe del Solar shares a conversation with Theodore Kerr about the importance of being transparent about your identity and positionality with the communities you work with. Marina writes about identity politics and how knowing where you stand with respect to power is an essential skill for oral historians.

Read More
In Workshop Reflections Tags oral history, listening, memory, Storytelling, AI, language
1 Comment

Dialogue with Institutionalized Residents: Examples and Advice

May 14, 2020 Admin
Mt. Fuji in distance(Photo: Sach Takayasu)

Mt. Fuji in distance

(Photo: Sach Takayasu)

How do you engage in a dialogue with a narrator who lives permanently in an institution? Let me tell you a story.

Read More
In Workshop Reflections Tags oral history, listening, memory, Storytelling, AI, language
4 Comments

AI: An opportunity to reimagine an old-world anew

May 13, 2020 Admin
A black earbud case sits on a smartphone.Photo by SCREEN POST on Unsplash

A black earbud case sits on a smartphone.

Photo by SCREEN POST on Unsplash

In this piece, Francine D. Spang-Willis reimagines a relationship with oral history and technology to create artificial intelligence that is more representative of and responsive to maintaining and perpetuating Indigenous language, knowledge, and culture. The piece is inspired by Stephanie Dinkins' Oral History as Told by AI presentation given on April 2, 2020.

Read More
In Workshop Reflections Tags oral history, listening, memory, Storytelling, AI, language
3 Comments
  • Advocacy
  • Alumni
  • art
  • collaboration
  • community
  • Current Students
  • Decolonize
  • Health & Medicine
  • identity
  • Interviewing
  • knowledge
  • language
  • listening
  • memory
  • music
  • narrative
  • new york
  • oral history
  • Oral History and Storytelling
  • Oral History and the future
  • Oral History for Social Change
  • Oral History in the Arts
  • organizing
  • personal
  • story
  • story gathering
  • Storytelling
  • subjectivity
  • Technology
  • voice
  • Aging
  • Archives
  • Brazil
  • Comedy
  • Community Impact
  • deep listening
  • Education
  • Feminism
  • Film
  • History
  • Identity
  • identity
  • immigrants
  • Journalism
  • Media Technology
  • Memoir
  • Methodology
  • Museum/Exhibits
  • peace activism
  • Performance
  • Psychology
  • Public Media
  • research
  • sexuality
  • Social Justice
  • social movements
  • Social work
  • Soundwalks
  • storytelling
  • Technology

Subscribe to the OHMA newsletter

Sign up with your email address to receive news and updates.

We respect your privacy.

Thank you!

Oral History Master of Arts
Incite Institute at Columbia University
61 Claremont Avenue Suite 1300
New York, NY 10115