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Oral History Master of Arts

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Oral History as Poetry: Restoring a Visual Orality

September 23, 2016 Admin

Nyssa Chow (2015) is an OHMA student and Teaching Fellow in our Method, Theory, and Interpretation course this fall through Columbia’s Center for Teaching and Learning. Her work with OHMA Co-Director Mary Marshall Clark to transform oral history by teaching visual literacy recently received Columbia’s Faculty Provost Award. In this post, Nyssa reflects on ethnopoetric transcription through Della Pollock and Hudson Vaughan’s talk in our Oral History Workshop Series this spring and discusses her experiences in visually expressing her narrators’ orality in print.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags ethnopoetic, transcription, nyssa chow, center for teaching and learning, della pollock, hudson vaughan, orality, visuality, Marian Cheek Jackson Center for Making and Saving History, Public History
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To Revise is to Create: Reflections on Editing and Translation for OHMA and Voice of Witness

June 9, 2016 Admin

In this post, current OHMA student Pablo Baeza reflects on his internship with Voice of Witness, publishers of a human rights-focused oral history book series. Pablo discusses the ethics of editing interviews for publication and offers a comparison to the experience of compiling his thesis website, Neuva York es la Frontera.

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In OHMA Internships Tags pablo baeza, oral history internship, voice of witness, interview editing, Human Rights, transcription, bilingual, orality, ethnopoetic
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Oral History Master of Arts
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