Linguistics and Oral History
Towards an Interdisciplinary Approach
Herausgeber: Fitzgerald, Chris
Linguistics and Oral History
Towards an Interdisciplinary Approach
Herausgeber: Fitzgerald, Chris
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Brings together oral historians and linguists from around the world to explore the complimentary nature of these two disciplines.
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Brings together oral historians and linguists from around the world to explore the complimentary nature of these two disciplines.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Academic
- Seitenzahl: 268
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. September 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 570g
- ISBN-13: 9781350458239
- ISBN-10: 1350458236
- Artikelnr.: 72699871
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Academic
- Seitenzahl: 268
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. September 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 570g
- ISBN-13: 9781350458239
- ISBN-10: 1350458236
- Artikelnr.: 72699871
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Chris Fitzgerald is a Researcher and Lecturer in the Department of English Language and Literature at Mary Immaculate College, Ireland.
List of Figures
List of Tables
List of Contributors
Introduction, Chris Fitzgerald (Mary Immaculate College, Ireland)
1. The Role of Memory and Language in Oral Histories, Natalie Braber
(Nottingham Trent University, UK)
2. In and Out of Context: Oral History as Data, Mary Larson (Oklahoma State
University, USA)
3. The Collector as A Linguist: Interpreting Transcription Practices of
Irish English Oral Ethnographies, Gili Diamant (Cardiff University, UK)
4. Oral History and the Limits of Interpretation, Steven High (Concordia
University, Canada)
5. Analyzing for Resistance in Talk and Text: Challenges and Opportunities
for Critical Discourse Analysts and Oral Historians, Elizabeth Kiely (
University College Cork, Ireland)
6. Oral History with Second Language Narrators, Carol McKirdy (TAFE,
Sydney, Australia)
7. Crossroads: Where Oral History, English Language Teaching, and
Culturally Sustaining Pedagogies Intersect, Mary Romney-Schaab (Capital
Community College, Connecticut, USA)
8. 'Linguistics Hadn't Been Invented': Oral Histories of Speech Therapy in
the Twentieth Century, Jois Stansfield (Scottish Oral History Centre, UK)
9. Combining Oral History and Linguistics to Explore Public Art and
Cultural Memory, Sarah O'Brien (Mary Immaculate College, Ireland) and Chris
Fitzgerald (Mary Immaculate College, Ireland)
10. The Regional Dialects Diachronic (REDD) Corpus Project: Using Archives
for Dialectology Research, Sarah Kirk-Browne (The British Library, UK)
11. The Freiburg Corpus of English Dialects (FRED): Challenges and
Affordances of a Corpus of Oral Histories, Nuria Hernández (Duisburg Essen
University, Germany) and Susanne Wagner (Johannes Gutenberg University of
Mainz, Germany)
12. Keywords in Discourse: Unlocking the Meaning Attributed to Historical
Events around the French Libération (1944) in Interviews with Time
Witnesses in Later Life, Annette Gerstenberg (Potsdam University, Germany)
Index
List of Tables
List of Contributors
Introduction, Chris Fitzgerald (Mary Immaculate College, Ireland)
1. The Role of Memory and Language in Oral Histories, Natalie Braber
(Nottingham Trent University, UK)
2. In and Out of Context: Oral History as Data, Mary Larson (Oklahoma State
University, USA)
3. The Collector as A Linguist: Interpreting Transcription Practices of
Irish English Oral Ethnographies, Gili Diamant (Cardiff University, UK)
4. Oral History and the Limits of Interpretation, Steven High (Concordia
University, Canada)
5. Analyzing for Resistance in Talk and Text: Challenges and Opportunities
for Critical Discourse Analysts and Oral Historians, Elizabeth Kiely (
University College Cork, Ireland)
6. Oral History with Second Language Narrators, Carol McKirdy (TAFE,
Sydney, Australia)
7. Crossroads: Where Oral History, English Language Teaching, and
Culturally Sustaining Pedagogies Intersect, Mary Romney-Schaab (Capital
Community College, Connecticut, USA)
8. 'Linguistics Hadn't Been Invented': Oral Histories of Speech Therapy in
the Twentieth Century, Jois Stansfield (Scottish Oral History Centre, UK)
9. Combining Oral History and Linguistics to Explore Public Art and
Cultural Memory, Sarah O'Brien (Mary Immaculate College, Ireland) and Chris
Fitzgerald (Mary Immaculate College, Ireland)
10. The Regional Dialects Diachronic (REDD) Corpus Project: Using Archives
for Dialectology Research, Sarah Kirk-Browne (The British Library, UK)
11. The Freiburg Corpus of English Dialects (FRED): Challenges and
Affordances of a Corpus of Oral Histories, Nuria Hernández (Duisburg Essen
University, Germany) and Susanne Wagner (Johannes Gutenberg University of
Mainz, Germany)
12. Keywords in Discourse: Unlocking the Meaning Attributed to Historical
Events around the French Libération (1944) in Interviews with Time
Witnesses in Later Life, Annette Gerstenberg (Potsdam University, Germany)
Index
List of Figures
List of Tables
List of Contributors
Introduction, Chris Fitzgerald (Mary Immaculate College, Ireland)
1. The Role of Memory and Language in Oral Histories, Natalie Braber
(Nottingham Trent University, UK)
2. In and Out of Context: Oral History as Data, Mary Larson (Oklahoma State
University, USA)
3. The Collector as A Linguist: Interpreting Transcription Practices of
Irish English Oral Ethnographies, Gili Diamant (Cardiff University, UK)
4. Oral History and the Limits of Interpretation, Steven High (Concordia
University, Canada)
5. Analyzing for Resistance in Talk and Text: Challenges and Opportunities
for Critical Discourse Analysts and Oral Historians, Elizabeth Kiely (
University College Cork, Ireland)
6. Oral History with Second Language Narrators, Carol McKirdy (TAFE,
Sydney, Australia)
7. Crossroads: Where Oral History, English Language Teaching, and
Culturally Sustaining Pedagogies Intersect, Mary Romney-Schaab (Capital
Community College, Connecticut, USA)
8. 'Linguistics Hadn't Been Invented': Oral Histories of Speech Therapy in
the Twentieth Century, Jois Stansfield (Scottish Oral History Centre, UK)
9. Combining Oral History and Linguistics to Explore Public Art and
Cultural Memory, Sarah O'Brien (Mary Immaculate College, Ireland) and Chris
Fitzgerald (Mary Immaculate College, Ireland)
10. The Regional Dialects Diachronic (REDD) Corpus Project: Using Archives
for Dialectology Research, Sarah Kirk-Browne (The British Library, UK)
11. The Freiburg Corpus of English Dialects (FRED): Challenges and
Affordances of a Corpus of Oral Histories, Nuria Hernández (Duisburg Essen
University, Germany) and Susanne Wagner (Johannes Gutenberg University of
Mainz, Germany)
12. Keywords in Discourse: Unlocking the Meaning Attributed to Historical
Events around the French Libération (1944) in Interviews with Time
Witnesses in Later Life, Annette Gerstenberg (Potsdam University, Germany)
Index
List of Tables
List of Contributors
Introduction, Chris Fitzgerald (Mary Immaculate College, Ireland)
1. The Role of Memory and Language in Oral Histories, Natalie Braber
(Nottingham Trent University, UK)
2. In and Out of Context: Oral History as Data, Mary Larson (Oklahoma State
University, USA)
3. The Collector as A Linguist: Interpreting Transcription Practices of
Irish English Oral Ethnographies, Gili Diamant (Cardiff University, UK)
4. Oral History and the Limits of Interpretation, Steven High (Concordia
University, Canada)
5. Analyzing for Resistance in Talk and Text: Challenges and Opportunities
for Critical Discourse Analysts and Oral Historians, Elizabeth Kiely (
University College Cork, Ireland)
6. Oral History with Second Language Narrators, Carol McKirdy (TAFE,
Sydney, Australia)
7. Crossroads: Where Oral History, English Language Teaching, and
Culturally Sustaining Pedagogies Intersect, Mary Romney-Schaab (Capital
Community College, Connecticut, USA)
8. 'Linguistics Hadn't Been Invented': Oral Histories of Speech Therapy in
the Twentieth Century, Jois Stansfield (Scottish Oral History Centre, UK)
9. Combining Oral History and Linguistics to Explore Public Art and
Cultural Memory, Sarah O'Brien (Mary Immaculate College, Ireland) and Chris
Fitzgerald (Mary Immaculate College, Ireland)
10. The Regional Dialects Diachronic (REDD) Corpus Project: Using Archives
for Dialectology Research, Sarah Kirk-Browne (The British Library, UK)
11. The Freiburg Corpus of English Dialects (FRED): Challenges and
Affordances of a Corpus of Oral Histories, Nuria Hernández (Duisburg Essen
University, Germany) and Susanne Wagner (Johannes Gutenberg University of
Mainz, Germany)
12. Keywords in Discourse: Unlocking the Meaning Attributed to Historical
Events around the French Libération (1944) in Interviews with Time
Witnesses in Later Life, Annette Gerstenberg (Potsdam University, Germany)
Index







