Upcoming events
June 2025
30junAll Day03jul2025 AHA Conference
Event Details
The AHA Executive has advised the next annual AHA Conference will be held in Townsville from Monday 30 June to Thursday 3 July 2025. Please save the dates. The AHA 2025
Event Details
The AHA Executive has advised the next annual AHA Conference will be held in Townsville from Monday 30 June to Thursday 3 July 2025. Please save the dates.
The AHA 2025 annual conference will chaired by Ben Jones (CQU) and Koen Stapelbroek (JCU).
Time
30 June 2025 - 3 July 2025 (All Day)(GMT+10:00)
July 2025
30junAll Day03jul2025 AHA Conference
Event Details
The AHA Executive has advised the next annual AHA Conference will be held in Townsville from Monday 30 June to Thursday 3 July 2025. Please save the dates. The AHA 2025
Event Details
The AHA Executive has advised the next annual AHA Conference will be held in Townsville from Monday 30 June to Thursday 3 July 2025. Please save the dates.
The AHA 2025 annual conference will chaired by Ben Jones (CQU) and Koen Stapelbroek (JCU).
Time
30 June 2025 - 3 July 2025 (All Day)(GMT+10:00)
September 2025
16sepAll Day19IOHA Conference 2024Re-Thinking Oral History
Event Details
The 23rd International Oral History Association (IOHA) Conference is scheduled for Kraków, Poland from 16-19 September 2025. The theme of the conference is Re-Thinking Oral History. Biennial conferences of the International Oral
Event Details
The 23rd International Oral History Association (IOHA) Conference is scheduled for Kraków, Poland from 16-19 September 2025.
The theme of the conference is Re-Thinking Oral History.
Biennial conferences of the International Oral History Association (IOHA) allow for reviewing the global conditions and problems of oral history, regardless of the actual conference theme. This time, however, the organizers of the 23rd IOHA Conference call on oral historians worldwide to consciously rethink the idea and practice of their discipline.
Oral history today faces both old and new challenges with long-lasting and unpredictable consequences: the crisis of liberal democracy, growing tensions in international politics, climate change with its devastating outcomes on human life, increasing inequalities, wars, and mass migrations. All of the foregoing not only affect the conditions in which oral history is made, but also compels us to rethink its very aim. For Central and Eastern Europe, the full-scale Russian aggression in Ukraine beginning in February 2022 and its consequences are an especially painful reminder of that. Though oral history was, and still is a part of history, it has always been conscious of the responsibility (oral) history has for the current society. Aware of that mission, we encourage the global oral history community to return to the core questions of our practice: what kind of histories should we tell and pass on to the current and future generation
Find out more about the conference at: https://ioha2025.conference.pl/.
See the Call for Papers – https://ioha2025.conference.pl/en/call-for-papers. The deadline for proposal submissions was 31 August 2024.
Time
16 September 2025 - 19 September 2025 (All Day)(GMT+01:00)
Location
Kraków
Recent past events
March 2024
16mar9:00 am4:00 pmConducting oral history interviews on sensitive or painful subjectsOHV workshop
Event Details
Saturday 16 March 2024, 9.30am-4.00pm, online via Zoom Taught by Sarah Rood and Alistair Thomson (see trainer profiles here) Interviews on topics such as war, natural disaster, illness or violence are
Event Details
Saturday 16 March 2024, 9.30am-4.00pm, online via Zoom
Taught by Sarah Rood and Alistair Thomson (see trainer profiles here)
Interviews on topics such as war, natural disaster, illness or violence are likely to be challenging for the interviewee and the interviewer. But any oral history interview can trigger difficult and painful remembering and will require an appropriate response and appropriate preparation in the first place. This OHV online Advanced Workshop by two of Australia’s most experienced oral history trainers will consider: the personal and ethical responsibilities of the oral historian; the range of ways in which interviews might generate difficult or painful remembering; minimising risk in project planning and communication; issues and approaches for interviewing on sensitive subjects and responding to difficult remembering; the safety of the interviewee and interviewer; and responsibilities and options after the interview.
Participants in this advanced workshop must have interview experience or have participated in an OHV Oral History Beginners workshop. You will be encouraged to bring relevant examples from your own oral history practice for discussion. In 2023 this course was full booked with a long waiting list, so don’t delay your registration.
For details of course fees and to register, visit our Humanitix listing here.
Please note that tickets are first made available to OHV members, with non-members able to register a week later (from the 14th February).
Virtual Event Details
Event has already taken place!
Time
16 March 2024 9:00 am - 4:00 pm(GMT+11:00)
Organizer
23mar9:00 am3:30 pmRemember to Press Record: Getting Started with Oral HistoryOHV beginners workshop
Event Details
Saturday 23 March, In-person at North Melbourne Library (Hotham Room) Trainers: Miranda Francis & Nicolette Snowden Further details and registration for this OHV Beginner course here.
Event Details
Saturday 23 March, In-person at North Melbourne Library (Hotham Room)
Trainers: Miranda Francis & Nicolette Snowden
Further details and registration for this OHV Beginner course here.
Time
23 March 2024 9:00 am - 3:30 pm(GMT+11:00)
Location
North Melbourne Library
Organizer
April 2024
19aprAll DayGraduate Oral History IntensiveOHV 4-day program
Event Details
Four-day online course, 19-20 April and 3-4 May 2024, offered by Oral History Victoria. Taught by Carla Pascoe Leahy, Sarah Rood and Alistair Thomson (for trainer profiles – see https://events.humanitix.com/graduate-oral-history-intensive) Are
Event Details
Four-day online course, 19-20 April and 3-4 May 2024, offered by Oral History Victoria.
Taught by Carla Pascoe Leahy, Sarah Rood and Alistair Thomson (for trainer profiles – see https://events.humanitix.com/graduate-oral-history-intensive)
Are you a PhD, Masters or Honours student, or a post-doc, about to start a research project using oral history – and need training to get you on the right track? Perhaps you’ve already started a graduate oral history project and want advice and support? You may be a historian, or you work in another social science or humanities discipline that uses life story interviews. This four-day, online training course could be just what you need.
In Autumn 2024, three of Australia’s leading oral historians, in partnership with Oral History Victoria, are pioneering an oral history intensive course aimed at university research students.We will teach you how to plan an oral history project and apply for ethics approval. You’ll learn how to create excellent interviews and document the recordings for use in research. We’ll explore approaches to analysing interviews and interpreting memories. And we’ll consider how to write a thesis using oral history as well as other types of oral history productions.
You will be active participants in the teaching and learning: reading a selection of key texts, bringing examples and issues from you own research, workshopping issues with the group, conducting practice interviews, discussing interview extracts from each participant, and developing a peer support group of graduate oral history researchers from around Australia, New Zealand and South-East Asia. Each day school will be taught online via Zoom, from 9.30am-4pm Australian Eastern Standard time. The course will be limited to 18 participants.
Course outline
Day 1 Friday 19 April – Planning Your Oral History Project & Seeking Ethics Approval
Day 2 Saturday 20 April – Creating & Documenting Oral History Interviews
(fortnight break while participants conduct practice interviews)
Day 3 Friday 3 May – Interpreting Oral Histories
Day 4 Saturday 4 May – Making (Oral) Histories in Writing and other Media
Course fees:
$500 for Oral History Victoria and Oral History Australia members;
$750 non-members
We anticipate participants will draw on funds from their own or departmental graduate research budgets. For students without access to research funds, bursaries might be available from state and territory oral history associations.
Registration via https://events.humanitix.com/graduate-oral-history-intensive
Contact: for further information and to discuss the course, please contact: Alistair.Thomson@monash.edu
Virtual Event Details
Event has already taken place!
Time
19 April 2024 All Day(GMT+11:00)
Organizer
August 2024
27aug5:30 pm6:30 pmAsk Al - August 2024Ideas and Skills Exchange
Event Details
Hosted by our OHV Committee Member and President of Oral History Australia, Professor Al Thomson, the Ideas and Skills Exchange session provides an opportunity for OHV members to ask questions and share experiences
Event Details
Hosted by our OHV Committee Member and President of Oral History Australia, Professor Al Thomson, the Ideas and Skills Exchange session provides an opportunity for OHV members to ask questions and share experiences and discoveries in oral history.
Please click this URL to start or join. https://monash.zoom.us/j/84417515850?pwd=TGplUDlIckdqdmNxVVYxQ3N2dFBzUT09
Or, go to https://monash.zoom.us/join and enter meeting ID: 844 1751 5850 and passcode: 667975
Ensure your device has a dedicated microphone and webcam.
Starts at 5:30PM AEDST
Virtual Event Details
Event has already taken place!
Time
27 August 2024 5:30 pm - 6:30 pm(GMT+11:00)
September 2024
24sep5:30 pm5:30 pmAsk Al - September 2024Ideas and Skills Exchange
Event Details
Hosted by our OHV Committee Member and President of Oral History Australia, Professor Al Thomson, the Ideas and Skills Exchange session provides an opportunity for OHV members to ask questions and share experiences
Event Details
Hosted by our OHV Committee Member and President of Oral History Australia, Professor Al Thomson, the Ideas and Skills Exchange session provides an opportunity for OHV members to ask questions and share experiences and discoveries in oral history.
Please click this URL to start or join. https://monash.zoom.us/j/84417515850?pwd=TGplUDlIckdqdmNxVVYxQ3N2dFBzUT09
Or, go to https://monash.zoom.us/join and enter meeting ID: 844 1751 5850 and passcode: 667975
Ensure your device has a dedicated microphone and webcam.
Event Starts at 5:30 PM AEDST
Virtual Event Details
Event has already taken place!
Time
24 September 2024 5:30 pm - 5:30 pm(GMT+11:00)
October 2024
Event Details
Have you always wanted to learn how to create an oral history interview? Or do you have an interest in recording the memories of elders in your family or community?
Event Details
Have you always wanted to learn how to create an oral history interview? Or do you have an interest in recording the memories of elders in your family or community? Maybe you’re wondering whether or not to record remotely, or you’re thinking about conducting face-to-face interviews.
This popular Oral History Victoria two-day online training workshop is for anyone who would like to learn how to prepare, conduct, record and document an oral history interview. Facilitated by two of Australia’s most experienced oral history trainers, and using Zoom technology, you will learn and practice essential interview techniques and discuss important ethical issues.
After the first Saturday sessions, you will conduct your own oral history interview (remote recording or face-to-face), which will be a learning resource in the second Saturday sessions. The workshop will be limited to 16 participants to enable lively discussion and practical work in an online format. Participants will need a computer with wifi connection – the Zoom link will be provided, along with Zoom instructions.
Feedback from participants on this course 2020-2022
‘The skills I learnt and the discussions that took place were invaluable’
‘I liked it that our activities really tested our comfort zones. It was just terrific.’
‘Al and Sarah are wonderful educators and facilitators!
‘A wonderful learning experience. I’ve definitely fallen in love with oral history too!’
‘I loved the course – learned so much on so many different levels, far more than I would have expected in 8 hours. Well done on awesome Zoom teaching.’
‘Thanks so much for providing us with such a great course. I have already promoted future courses to my friends.’
Tickets
To purchase your ticket, visit our Humanitix listing…
Click Here to Purchase Tickets
Please note, tickets are made available to OHV members first, before being made more widely available from the 2nd of September 2024.
Trainer profiles
Sarah Rood is a professional consulting historian who has been working in the field for the past 20 years. She has seen the uses and applications of oral history change drastically. Motivated by a desire to help communicate the past and to help connect individuals and communities with history and identity Sarah has recorded countless oral history interviews. Firmly believing that everyone has a story to tell, Sarah aims to work with people to record their stories in a way that both documents their experiences and ensures that (with permission) it can be accessed by others in the future. Exploring the relationship between new technologies and oral histories has become a particular area of interest for Sarah in recent years. Similarly, the interplay between the tangible and the intangible and how this plays out in oral history is a constant source of intrigue for Sarah.
Alistair Thomson, national award-winning teacher and now Emeritus Professor of History at Monash University, taught his first oral history workshop in 1985 at the Wangaratta Centre for Continuing Education and has been teaching oral history in both community and academic settings ever since. Al is currently President of Oral History Australia. His oral history books include: Anzac Memories: Living with the Legend (1994), The Oral History Reader (2016), Ten Pound Poms: Australia’s Invisible Migrants (2005), Moving Stories: an intimate history of four women across two countries (2011), Oral History and Photography (2011), and Australian Lives: An Intimate History (2017). Al is currently leading a research project about the history of fathering in Australia and co-editing The Bloomsbury Oral History Handbook. Contact: Alistair.Thomson@monash.edu
Training program format
Timing: the workshop takes place over two consecutive Saturdays.
On each workshop day the session will go from 9.30am – 4 pm with a lunch break from 12 – 1.15 pm.
Time
12 October 2024 9:30 am - 4:00 pm(GMT+11:00)
Event Details
Have you always wanted to learn how to create an oral history interview? Or do you have an interest in recording the memories of elders in your family or community?
Event Details
Have you always wanted to learn how to create an oral history interview? Or do you have an interest in recording the memories of elders in your family or community? Maybe you’re wondering whether or not to record remotely, or you’re thinking about conducting face-to-face interviews.
This popular Oral History Victoria two-day online training workshop is for anyone who would like to learn how to prepare, conduct, record and document an oral history interview. Facilitated by two of Australia’s most experienced oral history trainers, and using Zoom technology, you will learn and practice essential interview techniques and discuss important ethical issues.
After the first Saturday sessions, you will conduct your own oral history interview (remote recording or face-to-face), which will be a learning resource in the second Saturday sessions. The workshop will be limited to 16 participants to enable lively discussion and practical work in an online format. Participants will need a computer with wifi connection – the Zoom link will be provided, along with Zoom instructions.
Feedback from participants on this course 2020-2022
‘The skills I learnt and the discussions that took place were invaluable’
‘I liked it that our activities really tested our comfort zones. It was just terrific.’
‘Al and Sarah are wonderful educators and facilitators!
‘A wonderful learning experience. I’ve definitely fallen in love with oral history too!’
‘I loved the course – learned so much on so many different levels, far more than I would have expected in 8 hours. Well done on awesome Zoom teaching.’
‘Thanks so much for providing us with such a great course. I have already promoted future courses to my friends.’
Tickets
To purchase your ticket, visit our Humanitix listing…
Click Here to Purchase Tickets
Please note, tickets are made available to OHV members first, before being made more widely available from the 2nd of September 2024.
Trainer profiles
Sarah Rood is a professional consulting historian who has been working in the field for the past 20 years. She has seen the uses and applications of oral history change drastically. Motivated by a desire to help communicate the past and to help connect individuals and communities with history and identity Sarah has recorded countless oral history interviews. Firmly believing that everyone has a story to tell, Sarah aims to work with people to record their stories in a way that both documents their experiences and ensures that (with permission) it can be accessed by others in the future. Exploring the relationship between new technologies and oral histories has become a particular area of interest for Sarah in recent years. Similarly, the interplay between the tangible and the intangible and how this plays out in oral history is a constant source of intrigue for Sarah.
Alistair Thomson, national award-winning teacher and now Emeritus Professor of History at Monash University, taught his first oral history workshop in 1985 at the Wangaratta Centre for Continuing Education and has been teaching oral history in both community and academic settings ever since. Al is currently President of Oral History Australia. His oral history books include: Anzac Memories: Living with the Legend (1994), The Oral History Reader (2016), Ten Pound Poms: Australia’s Invisible Migrants (2005), Moving Stories: an intimate history of four women across two countries (2011), Oral History and Photography (2011), and Australian Lives: An Intimate History (2017). Al is currently leading a research project about the history of fathering in Australia and co-editing The Bloomsbury Oral History Handbook. Contact: Alistair.Thomson@monash.edu
Training program format
Timing: the workshop takes place over two consecutive Saturdays.
On each workshop day the session will go from 9.30am – 4 pm with a lunch break from 12 – 1.15 pm.
Time
19 October 2024 9:30 am - 4:00 pm(GMT+11:00)
29oct5:30 pm5:30 pmAsk Al - October 2024Ideas and Skills Exchange
Event Details
Hosted by our OHV Committee Member and President of Oral History Australia, Professor Al Thomson, the Ideas and Skills Exchange session provides an opportunity for OHV members to ask questions and share experiences
Event Details
Hosted by our OHV Committee Member and President of Oral History Australia, Professor Al Thomson, the Ideas and Skills Exchange session provides an opportunity for OHV members to ask questions and share experiences and discoveries in oral history.
Please click this URL to start or join. https://monash.zoom.us/j/84417515850?pwd=TGplUDlIckdqdmNxVVYxQ3N2dFBzUT09
Or, go to https://monash.zoom.us/join and enter meeting ID: 844 1751 5850 and passcode: 667975
Ensure your device has a dedicated microphone and webcam.
Event Starts at 5:30 PM AEDST
Virtual Event Details
Event has already taken place!
Time
29 October 2024 5:30 pm - 5:30 pm(GMT+11:00)
November 2024
15novAll Day17NOHANZ Conference 2024Working Together
Event Details
The National Oral History Association of New Zealand (NOHANZ) will hold its biennial conference from 15-17 November 2024 in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland. The theme of the conference is ‘Working Together’. Abstracts
Event Details
The National Oral History Association of New Zealand (NOHANZ) will hold its biennial conference from 15-17 November 2024 in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland. The theme of the conference is ‘Working Together’.
Abstracts should be submitted by 31 March 2024. Go to the Call for Papers.
Go to the NOHANZ website – https://www.oralhistory.org.nz/index.php/conferences-pastpresent/.
Time
15 November 2024 - 17 November 2024 (All Day)(GMT+13:00)