Friday 18 February 2011

CAM FM and Personal Histories partnership

The Cambridge student radio station, CAM FM, has decided to partner with the Personal-Histories Project, becoming our public voice, broadcasting segments of our retrospective discussions every Sunday.

This Sunday, at 4pm, Vicki Perrin and 'The Cambridge Arts Show' on CAM FM (97.2) will broadcast audio clips from our 2007 film.

<http://sms.cam.ac.uk/media/1080389>

An oral history of the beginnings of gendered analyses in archaeology with William Wyse Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge, Henrietta Moore, Professor Meg Conkey from University of
California at Berkeley, Professor Ruth Tringham also from Berkeley and Professor Alison Wylie from the University of Washington recounting their memories and young experiences as they pioneered early symbolic, gendered and structural approaches during the 1970s.

Enjoy,
The Personal Histories team

Friday 11 February 2011

CAM FM interview

You can listen to an interview with Pamela and Sam on CAM 97.2 FM radio through the following link (click on 6th February on the calendar and then 'the Cambridge arts show').

http://www.camfm.co.uk/index.php?option=com_radioshows&view=daily&Itemid=12#cal

Enjoy,
Owen, Personal Histories

Tuesday 1 February 2011

Personal histories: the story so far

Dear all,

As the next personal histories event is yet months away, Pamela has kindly written a series of brief summaries, and collected various resources, for past personal histories events. If you are interested in learning any more about these events, or of having access to original materials (such as videos), please send an e-mail to our regular address.

A general description of the Project is available on
http://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/personal-histories/

Five Personal Histories films are now uploaded to the University's
Streaming Media Service (SMS) and two others will soon be available.

2006

An oral history of the New Archaeology of the 1960s:http://sms.cam.ac.uk/media/1080569.

Professor Colin Renfrew from the University of Cambridge, Professor Mike
Schiffer from the University of Arizona and Professor Ezra Zubrow of the
State University of New York remember their personal and historical
involvement with the development of the New Archaeology during the 1950s
and 1960s. Also speaking are Disney Professor Graeme Barker and Professor
Paul Mellars from Cambridge, Professors Robin Dennell and Marek Zvelebil
from the University of Sheffield and Professor Rob Foley from the
Leverhulme Centre for Human Evolutionary Studies. The retrospective,
oral-historical discussion was held at the University of Cambridge,
Cambridge, UK, on the 23rd October 2006.

2007

An oral history of the beginnings of gendered analyses in science:http://sms.cam.ac.uk/media/1080389

Four of most eminent scholars in archaeology, William Wyse Professor of
Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge, Henrietta Moore,
Professor Meg Conkey from University of California at Berkeley, Professor
Ruth Tringham also from Berkeley and Professor Alison Wylie from the
University of Washington recount and analyse their memories and young
experiences as they pioneered early 'post-processual' symbolic, gendered
and structural approaches to archaeological analyses during the 1970s. The
discussion was held at the University of Cambridge on the 22rd October
2007.

2008

Personal Histories of the Theoretical Archaeology Group (TAG):http://sms.cam.ac.uk/media/1080397.

An oral history of TAG through 31 years is presented by the two original
founders of TAG, Professor Colin Renfrew, Cambridge, and Professor Andrew
Fleming, University of Wales, and Professor Richard Bradley from the
University of Reading, Professor Clive Gamble, Royal Holloway, University
of London, Professor Timothy Darvill from Bournemouth University, Duncan
Brown from the Southampton City Council and Professor Tim Champion from the
University of Southampton recounting their memories. The session was filmed
at the Southampton Theoretical Archaeology Group on the 16th December 2008.

2008

Oral-histories and the development of human evolutionary research:http://sms.cam.ac.uk/media/754446.

Professor Meave Leakey from the famous Leakey family and Head the Koobi
Fora Research Project, Professor Chris Stringer from the Natural History
Museum, Professor Leslie Aiello, President of the Wenner-Gren Foundation,
Professor David Pilbeam from Harvard University and Professor Adam Kuper of
Brunel University share their memories of their own research into the
origins of our species.

A montage comprised of clips from the 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009 Personal
Histories Panels created by Emily Walker is available:
http://sms.cam.ac.uk/media/756276.

2009

Oral historical accounts of the history of the Institute of Archaeology,
UCL

A film of the Personal Histories which Stephen Shennan, Director of the
Institute of Archaeology at University College London, and I organised held
at the Institute in London on 11th November 2009, will soon be uploaded.

The panellists included the 96-year-olds, Beatrice de Cardi and Rachel
Maxwell-Hyslop, who worked with Tessa and Mortimer Wheeler as they founded
the Institute during the 1930s. The late Peter Gathercole and the late John
Alexander, graduate students during the early 1950s also spoke. Ian Hodder,
one of the Institute's first undergraduates in the late 1960s, and three
Directors, John Evans, David Harris and Stephen Shennan contributed their
memories. The resulting film will be used during orientation for new
students and as a reference source on the Institute's web site.

2009

An Oral History of Media and Archaeology
On 12th October 2009, at the University of Cambridge,
Sir David Attenborough spoke before a huge crowd about his experiences as a
young assistant producer of the iconic and immensely popular BBC television
quiz programme, `Animal, vegetable or mineral?', during the early 1950s. As
he stated in an earlier letter to the Personal histories team, `I have many
vivid memories of Glyn Daniel, Mortimer Wheeler and others as well as
having something to do with Buried Treasure, Chronicle and the Silbury Hill
excavation.'

`What a starry collection of diggers, if the roof had fallen, in there
wouldn't have been a site director left in the country,' wrote Maev
Kennedy, archaeology correspondent for {The Guardian}, when
commenting on the illustrious audience who had gathered to hear Sir David's
memories.

Read about this event, as reported in `Archaeology becomes a sensation' (British Archaeology, Jan-Feb 2010). http://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/personal-histories/ba-110-january-february-2010-my-archaeology.pdf

The transcription is available from
http://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/repository/personal-histories-2009-transcript.pdf

In addition to all of the above, a new website with photos, video and other materials from last years' event (featuring David Attenborough) should 'go live' in the next couple of weeks.

Best wishes,
The Personal Histories team