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Interview Archiving

Preserving oral history recordings and making them accessible for users are key parts of the oral history process. Anticipate these steps from the outset of your project. Archiving digital recordings is specialized and exacting work. While many oral history interviewers do not need to understand archiving practices in detail, you do need to collaborate with an archivist. Understanding what archivists do and the information they need will help you help them better preserve and protect the oral history interviews you and narrators have created.

Preserving Oral History Interviews: Archiving

Start planning for preservation of oral history recordings and supporting materials such as transcripts and photographs well before the interviewing begins. Determine the repository for your park or program’s records and who is responsible for accessioning and managing them. Contact the appropriate archivist to discuss and coordinate interview preservation protocols. As the Oral History Association declares, “Every oral history project should have a plan for archiving its oral histories that aligns with the project’s goals and works within the capacity of the project’s partners.”

After the interview

Appropriate care and storage of original recordings begin immediately after their creation. Download the recordings from the recorder to a secure server; make duplicate copies and store the recordings in multiple locations. As archivists say, lots of copies keep stuff safe.

When you download files, establish consistent names for digital recording files. For guidance on naming conventions, see File Naming in the Digital Age.

Take a few minutes to write notes about the interview itself and the circumstances surrounding it. How did you prepare for the interview? What was the tone of interactions with the narrators? Were there any difficulties or idiosyncrasies with the recording itself or its setting? This information will provide context that can help future users.

It's important to provide intellectual access to the contents of the recorded interview. If your project has the resources of time, staff, and money, full transcripts are ideal. If not, time-coded indexes are an option. Consult with the archivist about the repository’s preferences. (See section on Transcription.)

To the archives

  • Donate your oral history recordings and supplementary materials as soon as possible. Archives offer security and protection for recordings in an environment that will promote their long-term preservation. In the archives storage environment, temperature, relative humidity, and light are optimally controlled and materials are protected from pests and other threats.

  • When transferring oral history materials to an archive, include items that a narrator might have donated such as photographs, documents, correspondence, and other records. These materials can enhance the use and interpretation of the oral history in the future.

  • Include metadata, such as: Who are the narrator and interviewer? What topics did they discuss? Where did the interview take place? How was the interview recorded? When did the interview occur? Why was the interview conducted in the first place? This basic information will help archivists track and manage information.

  • Be sure to include a signed legal release form with the interview. Most archives will not accept interviews unless they know that a narrator knew why the interview was being conducted and had transferred copyright.

  • Archivists have a huge responsibility once they accept oral history materials. They are responsible for storing, processing, refreshing, and making accessible recordings according to established archival standards designated for the media format used. Whenever possible, all efforts should be made to preserve electronic files in formats that are cross platform and nonproprietary. The obsolescence of all media formats should be assumed and planned for.

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Last updated: January 12, 2024