The 2021 issue of the Oral History Australia journal Studies In Oral History will be based on the theme 'Oral history, place and environment'.
Congratulations also to Oral History NSW committee member Alexandra Dellios who will be taking over from Francesco Ricatti as chair of the journal's Editorial Board, as of the 2021 issue.
Call for Papers
Humans are profoundly emplaced beings. We become attached to places – be they homes, cities or natural environments—so that when we are separated from them, we become homesick. Geographer Yi-Fu Tuan referred to this love of place or sense of place as ‘topophilia’, and it can also be connected to cultural belonging or family identity. Hence our place memories can be deeply felt and intensely personal. Moreover, place memories can retain a special resonance in the mind over time,associated as they are with sensory experiences, emotional associations and social inflections. Place matters, as oral historians have shown across a range of settings.
Place can be specific and localised, but it can also be extrapolated to the physical environments we inhabit more broadly. Increasingly, the fields of oral history and environmental history are finding productive intersections. Oral history offers attention to the ways in which humans remember and narrate their relationships to environments. Environmental history insists upon close attention to the more-than-human world, and the relationships between nature and culture, people and place. As environmental catastrophes with anthropogenic causes become more common in the twenty-first century, understanding human interrelationships with specific places and the environment is arguably more critical—and more urgent—than ever before.
This special issue of Studies in Oral History (formerly Oral History Australia Journal) invites reflections upon the ways in which oral history can illuminate and expand our understandings of place and environment. We invite broad and varied interpretations of this theme, which may include (but are not limited to):
Childhood memories of place
Connections to home, town, region or nation
Indigenous connections to country
Urban place memories
Regional and rural place memories
Place attachment and migration
Family history and meanings of ‘home’
Intergenerational knowledge of and attachment to place
‘Natural’ disasters
Environmental activism
Histories of environmental degradation
Environmental regulation
Environmental protection and rejuvenation.
To be considered for peer review, articles should be between 5,000 and 8,000 words (excluding references) and are due 30 November 2020. Publication of the special issue is anticipated in late 2021.
Any queries about this special issue can be directed to Joint Editors Skye Krichauff skye.krichauff@adelaide.edu.au and Carla Pascoe Leahy Carla.pascoeleahy@unimelb.edu.au.
Contributions can be emailed to the Editorial Board Chair Alexandra Dellios: alexandra.dellios@anu.edu.au.