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COH
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VAŇEK,
Miroslav - MÜCKE, Pavel - PELIKÁNOVÁ, Hana: Listening to the
Voices of Memory: Theoretical and Practical Aspects of Oral
History.
Praha: Ústav pro soudobé dějiny AV ČR, 2007, 224 s.
The
main questions raised in this publication deal with the topic
of oral history which is a qualitative research method and a
particular branch of study of history which developed rapidly
after the WWII especially in the USA and western Europe. The
book follows its genesis from the moments it became clear that
the political and economic history of states and populations,
the so-called „macro“ history, wasn’t sufficient in providing
the reasons for people’s decisions, in explaining their
motivation and presenting the uniquness of their experience in
general, up to present. The neccessity to record human
experience, to preserve it to future generations and to try to
interpret contemporary history „from below“ are the main
issues of this book.
Miroslav VAŇEK (ed.): The
Powerful? and the Helpless?
Praha, Prostor 2006. 412 s.
The book consists of ten essays
which derive from the publication „Victors? Vanquished?
Political Elites and Dissidents during the Period of So-Called
Normalization - Historical Interviews“.
Their authors, researchers and
associates of the Institute for Contemporary History, analyze,
from various points of views, a vast material in form of
dozens life histories of ex-dissidents and communist officials
gathered with the oral history method.
The interpretations aren‘t mere
summaries of narators‘ testimonies. They have no intention of
correcting the narrators or convicting them of consciously or
uncousiously told untruth, nor are they trying to extract some sort
of generalisations out of their testimonies. The interpretations‘
main goal is to reach an in-depth understanding of the stories or
happenings followed, i.e. to comprehend the complexity of events in
our contemporary history.
The ten interpretations bring the historians and wider public
interested in contemporary history an opportunity to get
acquainted with individual viewpoints about the character and
development of the so-called normalization period in ex-Czechoslovakia.
The readers can see for themselves that one interview can lead
to different results according to the various points of view
of an interpretation (and an interpreter).
OTÁHAL
Milan – VANĚK Miroslav: One Hundred Student Revolutions:
Students in the Period of the Fall of Communism - Life Stories.
Praha, Lidové noviny, 1999. 860 p.
This is without a doubt one of the key studies
of Czech historiography. Using the method of oral history,
the authors sought to explain life during "real existing
socialism" at the moment of its collapse, from a point
of view hitherto unknown to the historian, thus painting
a portrait of the lives of one hundred participants in the
November revolution in 1989. The first part of the book
includes a historical introduction into the topic of youth
during late communism and theoretical and methodological
essays on oral history, focusing particularly on interview
interpretation. The second part consists of additional material
and the full transcripts of 65 of the interviews. For many
years, the theoretical portion of this book represented
a unique source of widely-accessible information about oral
history for Czech readers.
VANĚK
Miroslav (ed.): Islands of Freedom. Young Czechoslovakia
in the Years 1969-1989.
Praha, Votobia – Ústav pro soudobé dějiny
AV ČR, 2002. 350 p.
This book presents the results of the project
“Youth Culture and the Road to
Civil Society“, which was financed by the Czech Science
Foundation (GA ČR). This research showed that the corrosion
of the communist regime had advanced to such an extent in
the last ten years of its existence that it was not able
to suppress – or in the final stages to even control - all
of the activities which appeared spontaneously and often
without any explicitly political intentions in the communities
of Czech youth, a generation which experienced neither the
1968 invasion nor its traumatic aftermath. The book consists
of six studies from one female and four male authors that
present different perspectives on the interests, everyday
life and mentalities of university students, trainees/apprentices
and working youth: from pacifism and the peace movement
to young people's views on religion, ecology, nature and
scouting and new trends in rock music. One essay also deals
with the specific theme of the efforts of the Secret Police
(StB) to control youth movements. The studies are based
on research results obtained via the oral history method.
All quotations are drawn from interview recordings archived
at the Oral History Center in the “Interviews“ collection.
VANĚK
Miroslav: The Oral History Method in Contemporary History.
Praha, Ústav pro soudobé dějiny AV ČR,
2004. 175 p.
The author summarizes and contextualizes
the theory and practice of oral history, working from the
experience gained by researchers at COH through their oral
history projects. The first part of the book presents a
short summary of the development of the oral history method
globally and then in the Czech context, and tries to deal
at least partially with the proliferation of terms used
to describe the method. The author then presents his own
view on the subject of interviewing and related issues.
This book can also serve as a guide to doing oral history
for those researchers in the social sciences and humanities
who acquire their research material from recording interviews.
JECHOVÁ
Květa: The People of Charter 77. A Report on Biographic
Research.
Praha, Ústav pro soudobé dějiny AV ČR,
2004. 170 p.
This book presents a historical analysis
of 36 life stories of Charter 77 members, based on interviews
conducted during 1992 – 1996 by Květa Jechová and Ilona
Christl, a former graduate student of sociology at the University
of Erlagen. At that time, the authors were among the first
to conduct interviews according to the oral history standards
of the period. The book contains the transcripts of four
of the most interesting interviews (Anna Marvanová, Jiří
Hájek, Václav Benda and Josef Vohryzek), as well as a section
devoted to interview interpretation according to the standards
of historical research. Almost all of the transcriptions
from the Charter 77 project are kept at the Oral History
Center in the “Interviews“ collection.
VANĚK
Miroslav – URBÁŠEK Pavel (eds.): Victors? Vanquished? Political
Elites and Dissidents during the Period of So-Called Normalization
- Historical Interviews. 2 volumes.
Praha, Prostor 2005, 1970 p.
The two-volume study Victors?
Vanquished? presents a selection of 50 exemplary
interviews chosen from a total of 120 recorded biographical
narrations of ex-dissidents and communist officials. The
first volume consists of 30 interviews with Czechoslovak
ex-dissidents who participated in the opposition to various
extents and at various levels; and the second volume is
comprised of 20 narrations from pre-November Czechoslovak
Communist Party functionaries from the level of the district
council all the way to the Presidium of the Central Committee
of CCP.
The interviews were conducted by researchers at the Institute
of Contemporary History using oral history methodology.
They not only enrich our knowledge of the normalization
period; they also enable us to peer into the life stories
and experiences of people who, in some way, influenced that
era or took part in forming it. The reader can create for
himself a three-dimensional - and at the same time non-textbook
– view of our recent history, because he can confront the
experiences of individuals as they are captured in the narratives
of dozens of actors.
On one side, we find the narrations of ex-dissidents such
as Petr Oslzlý, Václav Malý, Mikuláš Huba, František Stárek,
Petr Uhl, Vladimír Hučín, Václav Havel and many others;
and on the other side lie the stories of former communist
officials, including Jindřich Poledník, Rudolf Hegenbart,
Miloš Jakeš, Miroslav Štěpán, Zdeněk Hoření and Jaroslav
Čejka.
Both historians and the wider public have the opportunity
to contemplate the authentic narratives of a wide range
of people of various ages, who came from both the center
and the regions, including those who were famous and those
for whom this project presented their first possibility
to tell their life story. The biographical interviews do
not focus only on historical events or on Party, political
or dissident activities. They also present us with authentic
life stories, sometimes very intense and touching, sometimes
ordinary and at times, in spite of attempts at positive
self-representation or "autostylizace", repulsive.
The interviews also record the narrators' social and family
environment and their leisure activities and hobbies, in
an effort to give „living content“ to otherwise empty words
such as „communist official“ and „dissident“.
This book, which was intentionally given the ambiguous title
Victors? Vanquished?, fills
in a gap in history which is not possible to reconstruct
on the basis of written sources. It is intended not only
for those who lived through the period, but also for young
readers who are given a chance to reflect upon the public
and personal images of those who provided us with their
narrations, and to put the finishing touches on their own
picture of the historical period in question.
VAŇEK
Miroslav et al.: Oral History. Methodological and Technical
Procedures (a textbook).
Olomouc: 2003, 78 p.
This book deals with the rules and
principles of oral history as a method of historical research.
It presents a brief but compact and practical summary of
such topics as: contacting the narrators; research preparation;
sample questions; methods of conducting interviews; narration
possibilities and narration limits; archiving techniques;
transcription; and final text analysis. In addition to the
technical and instructional sections, it also includes an
example of a contact letter; statement of consent to process
and archive the material obtained through the interview;
as well as a legal analysis of the ramifications of contemporary
Czech legislation for doing oral history. The study was
published as a textbook and is directed primarily at university
students studying history, political science, sociology
and journalism.
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