To read this content please select one of the options below:

Timeless projects: remembering and voice in the history of education

Maxine Stephenson (Senior lecturer in Critical Studies in Education at the University of Auckland’s Faculty of Education)

History of Education Review

ISSN: 0819-8691

Article publication date: 14 October 2008

677

Abstract

I want to revisit also some of the ideas that linked memory and subjectivity that were popularised in the 1970s and 1980s response to limitations of the positivist tradition. I am concerned also with the relationship between the present and the past as it gets expressed in memory work to interrogate more fully not only ‘what happened’, but also how events come to be remembered in the ways that they are, and how they come to be understood as history. These ideas will be developed by drawing on some of what I consider to be key studies that use oral history, some directly related to education, some not. I will finish with voices that are not my own. These will be the voices of participants in an oral history project with which I have been involved. They will demonstrate in a more meaningful way, the ideas presented here and how a coming together of the fields of oral history and memory studies can enrich the understandings we have of experience in the history of education.

Keywords

Citation

Stephenson, M. (2008), "Timeless projects: remembering and voice in the history of education", History of Education Review, Vol. 37 No. 2, pp. 3-13. https://doi.org/10.1108/08198691200800006

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2008, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Related articles