Oral History for Social Change

APA4313.01
Course System Home Terms Spring 2024 Oral History for Social Change

Course Description

Summary

In a world filled with algorithms and “big data”are the stories that express our experiences and values still important? How can we promote the use of narratives when our stories can be used in ways that are neither ethical nor supportive of our vision for change? This class will share ways that oral history and narrative can be used to promote equity and empathy that challenge oppression and racism and can support the creation of stronger communities and a more peaceful world. We will study various forms of storytelling including how oral histories are being used in performance as well as international truth and reconciliation processes.This class will provide you with skills and insights needed to incorporate oral history and narrative in order to advance justice, build empathy, and move social justice projects forward. Participants will learn about how narrative and oral history methods are being used to build alliances, center marginalized voices and identify real strategies for change. You will learn basic skills needed to do community-based, anti-oppression oral history.Students will select a project of their own to implement the ideas and skills they will learn about in class.

Prerequisites

Contact Alisa Del Tufo (alisadeltufo@bennington.edu) for registration information.

Please contact the faculty member : alisadeltufo@bennington.edu

Instructor

  • Alisa Del Tufo

Day and Time

Academic Term

Spring 2024

Area of Study

Credits

2

Course Level

4000

Maximum Enrollment

12