Student Press Initiative - Teachers College - Columbia University. Download & Streaming : Audio Archive : Internet Archive. Listen to free audio books and poetry recordings! This library of audio books and poetry features digital recordings and MP3's from the Naropa Poetics Audio Archive, LibriVox, Project Gutenberg, Maria Lectrix, and Internet Archive users. LibriVox - founded in 2005 - is a community of volunteers from all over the world who record public domain texts: poetry, short stories, whole books, even dramatic works, in many different languages.
All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain in the USA and available as free downloads on the internet. If you are not in the USA, please check your country's copyright law before downloading. Please visit the LibriVox website where you can search for books that interest you. Non-English language collections contributed to the Open Source Audio collection are featured here. A great resource for podcasters: the Creative Commons Podcasting Legal Guide . Listen to sermons and lectures concerning religion and spirituality here. The Great 78 Project ! StoryCorps. Oral history – Mapping Endangered Oral Cultures Cambridge. Will he listen to the story of his grandfather Anniko Khorotetto when he grows up?
Tambei Tundra, Yamal 2011 For those interested in oral history, heritage and archiving: Here are some impressions of the “Charting vanishing voices” workshop, held by the Cambridge World Oral Literature Project . The workshop is on recent developments all over the world preserving oral cultural heritage. people from academic projects, practitioners, and data archiving specialists working with advanced multimedia technologies talked about archiving, questions of access for future generations, and recent research I was there there from the ORHELIA project because I wanted to find out from professionals like google, UNESCO and the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics about their technologies of data accessibility, archiving mapping. This is timely for us as we also aim to feed our materials in to some sort of database that can be used much longer than a scientific project runs.
Ethnographic Video Online. "Site navigation and indexing are excellent. . .
This high-quality, one-of-a-kind resource is invaluable for most programs in the social sciences and specifically for film studies and anthropology. Summing Up: Highly recommended. " ‒CHOICE A comprehensive online resource for the visual study of human culture and behavior and the largest, most affordable streaming video collection of its kind, Ethnographic Video Online: Volume I contains more than 750 hours of classic and contemporary documentaries produced by leading video producers in the discipline; previously unpublished footage from working anthropologists and ethnographers in the field; and select feature films. Oral History Online. "An essential resource for serious historical and cultural researchers, Oral History Online is unreservedly recommended for public and academic libraries, special collections, and archive/museums.
" –Library Journal"Oral History Online is a very useful product. . . It is obvious that ASP is making its best effort to produce a top quality product. " –Charleston Observer In his book The Voice of the Past, Paul Thompson writes: "Oral history is a history built around people. Oral histories are the voices of the disenfranchised—the famous and the lesser known. This kind of material has not been accessible to a wide audience. Oral History Online is a major initiative that will continue to grow, with new collections being added regularly. The index points to thousands of collections that represent millions pages of histories. "... The Oral History of Twentieth Century Mongolia - Sample Interviews.
We are pleased to present a sample transcription and translation of one of the oral history interviews.
We are making this public in order to illustrate the type of information we hope this project will elicit and preserve. As noted elsewhere, the project, upon completion, will have over 500 interviews, and a fully searchable database to make finding information and relevant interviews easier. You are welcome to use these interviews in your work, but please be sure to acknowledge their source: The Oral History of Twentieth Century Mongolia, University of Cambridge. Also, please let us know of any papers, presentations, etc. that you use the data in. A few important notes: First: These are largely uncorrected files. Second: The Mongolian transcription will not display all characters properly in Internet Explorer 6.0 and older. ORHELIA - Oral History of Empires by Elders in the Arctic. Oral History of Empires by Elders in the Arctic - ORHELIA Arctic Indigenous Groups Project Team A common history – common economy - common language roots – and different practices - among four Arctic indigenous peoples The idea for this project arose long ago, when we were talking to a Pupta Pudanasevich Yamal (this surname does not exist on paper any more , but in the memories of people) and his wife in Yamal, West Siberia, who told their life story in 2001.
Their grandchildren couldn't believe how much they had gone through. People living in the Arctic have had decisions made for them, far away in Southern in capital cities, be it in Russia, Finland or any other Northern country. The acronym Orhelia translates as “Oral History of Empires by Elders in the Arctic” with the subtitle “A comparative history of the relations between states / Empires and their subjects in their northernmost peripheries”. Oral Literature in Africa - Open Book Publishers. Teaching and Learning for a Sustainable Future.