References
Oral History Mainpage

Oral Traditions: What They Are and Why They Are Important

Documentation and Dissemination of Oral History

Bringing Oral History to the Classroom

Back to Ms. McKeen's Homepage
Books piled on a desk


Listed below are the books and articles from which I gathered information to create these webpages. They are cited in APA format. To contact me please e-mail amckeen@pacificu.edu.


eGoody, J. (1987). The interface between the written and the oral. Cambridge University Press. 1
eTonkin, E. (1995). Narrating our pasts: the social construction of oral history. Cambridge University Press. 2
eHart, E. (1995). Getting started in oral traditions research. Prince of Wales Norther Heritage Centre, Dept. of Education, Culture & Employment, Culture and Heritage Divsion, Govt. of the Northwest Territories. 3
eSalpeter, J. (2005). Telling tales with technology. Technology and Learning 25(7), 18. 4
eIshengoma, J.M. (2005). African oral traditions: riddles of the haya of northwestern tanzania. International Review of Education 51, 139-153.5
eOral History Online: information gathered from Journal of American History, June 2005. 6
eWorthington, J. (2003). Preservation of oral sources: an analysis of the methods employed by the sinomlando project, university of natal, for the preservation of oral sources. SA Archives Journal 43, 31-33. 7
3All Images from Google Image3