Open access chapters by Oxford academics for the ASEEES conference and OHA22
Open access chapters by Oxford academics for the ASEEES conference and OHA22
As part of the ASEEES and OHA22 (Oral History Association) conferences, chapters and articles by participants publishing with Oxford University Press were made freely available.
reading list ASEEES
- The Other Communards by Faith Hillis From Utopia's Discontents: Russian Émigrés and the Quest for Freedom, 1830s-1930s
- Transnationalizing fascist martyrs: an entangled history of the memorialization of Ion Moţa and Vasile Marin in Spain and Romania, 1937–41 by Francesco Zavatti Historical Research
- “The Bonfire of Muslim Unity”: Muslim Politics and the Crisis of Yugoslav Democracy by Emily Greble From Muslims and the Making of Modern Europe
- Ottoman Commercial History by Kate FleetOxford Research Encyclopedia in Asian History
- The Sino-Soviet Alliance in Konrad Adenauer’s Chancellorship, 1945–1963 by Steven Crawford Grundy Diplomatic Histor
- From Avars and Slavs to the First Medieval Kingdoms in Central Europe: Population and Settlement, 700–1100 by Daniel Ziemann From Oxford Handbook of Medieval Central Europ
- Russian Orientalism by Michael Kemper Oxford Research Encyclopedia in Asian History
- Mapping Latvians in Local and Global Perspectives by Catherine Gibson From Geographies of Nationhood: Cartography, Science, and Society in the Russian Imperial Baltic
- Doing Video Oral History by Brien R. Williams From The Oxford Handbook of Oral History
- Introduction: The Sound of Feminist Memory by Margaretta Jolly
- From Sisterhood and After: An Oral History of the UK Women's Liberation Movement, 1968-present
- The Dynamics of Indigenous Oral Sources by Nepia Mahuika From Rethinking Oral History and Tradition: An Indigenous Perspective
- Research Design by Patricia Leavy From Oral History: Understanding Qualitative Research
- Oral History Interviewing with Purpose and Critical Awareness by Valerie J. Janesick From The Oxford Handbook of Qualitative Research
- Oral Traditions as Sources by Stephen Belcher From Oxford Research Encyclopedia in African History