Historically Thinking
Historically Thinking
Oral History
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Oral History

Douglas A. Boyd explains the basics of the oldest—and newest—historical method

Published on October 19, 2025 (Episode 433)

Introduction

“Oral history is a field of study and a method of gathering, preserving, and interpreting the voices and memories of people, communities, and participants in past events.” So begins the Oral History Association’s definition—authoritative, concise, and yet filled with ambiguity. Is oral history the oldest historical practice, stretching back to the beginnings of humanity? Or is it one of the newest, born of modern recording technology and shaped ever since by the evolution of audio?

My guest Douglas A. Boyd argues that the answer is: both. Oral history is an ancient human impulse given new form by the cassette recorder, the digital archive, and—now—the recording studio you casually call your “phone.” Boyd is an oral historian, archivist, folklorist, musician, and Director of the Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History at the University of Kentucky. His newest book, Oral History: A Very Short Introduction, distills the method, ethics, technology, and wonder of the field—and that is the subject of our conversation today.

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About the Guest

Douglas A. Boyd is Director of the Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History at the University of Kentucky. He is an oral historian, archivist, folklorist, musician, and documentary producer. His latest book is Oral History: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press).


For Further Investigation


Reflection Questions

  1. Why does the definition of oral history contain both ancient and modern elements?

  2. How has recording technology shaped the goals and possibilities of oral history?

  3. What makes an interview “historical” rather than merely conversational?


If this episode made you think differently about memory, recording, or conversation, share it with a friend who enjoys history—or who might be someone you’d want to interview.

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Tags: Oral History; Douglas A. Boyd; Archives; Digital Humanities; Historically Thinking

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