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Oral History of British Science

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An Oral History of British Science is an oral history project conducted by National Life Stories at the British Library.[1] The project began in 2009 with funding from the Arcadia Fund, the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 and a number of other private donors and focuses on audio interviews with British science and engineering figures.

Project background

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The project focused on 200 video interviews lasting 8–15 hours, with four themes: Made in Britain, A Changing Planet, Cosmologies and Biomedicine.[2] The project Advisory Committee included Jon Agar, Alec Broers, Tilly Blyth, Georgina Ferry, Dame Julia Higgins, Maja Kominko, Sir Harry Kroto, John Lynch, Chris Rapley and Simone Turchetti.

An Oral History of British Science was conducted by National Life Stories (NLS) at the British Library, and formed part of a wider institutional initiative to better document contemporary history of science and technology through the addition of audio visual sources as well as written sources.[3][4]

Methodology

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The oral history of British science follows the biographical, or life story, oral history approach with each audio interview averaging 8 to 15 hours in length. The interviews cover the individual’s career history, education, background and family.[citation needed]

Access to interviews

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All interviews are catalogued on the Sound and Moving Image Catalogue.[5] Interviews which are complete and open are accessible onsite at the Library in St Pancras, London and in Boston Spa, Yorkshire via the Library’s Listening & Viewing Service.[6] Interviews which are open are also made accessible via the Archival Sound Recordings website under the ‘Oral history of British science’ content package.[7]

People interviewed

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Interviewed for ‘A Changing Planet’:

Interviewed for ‘Made in Britain’:

Interviewed under ‘Biomedicine’:

References

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  1. ^ Oral History of British Science webpage
  2. ^ "Blyth, Tilly (2010), 'Introducing An Oral History of British Science', Tilly Blyth, National Life Stories Review and Accounts 2009/2010, p.22'" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2022-10-09. Retrieved 2011-05-02.
  3. ^ "An Oral History of British Science project proposal, British Library, p.3" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-07-16. Retrieved 2011-05-08.
  4. ^ "National Life Stories (NLS)". The British Library.
  5. ^ British Library Sound and Moving Image Catalogue
  6. ^ "The British Library Listening & Viewing Service". Archived from the original on 2023-06-08. Retrieved 2011-05-02.
  7. ^ 'Oral history of British science' interviews on the Archival Sound Recordings website
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