Oral History Awards reflect extraordinary diversity
Media Release
Ministry for Culture and Heritage
8 June 2011
New Zealand Oral History Awards reflect extraordinary diversity
Over $120,000 have been awarded to 14 oral history projects including subjects such as the Auckland beach suburb of Milford, women judges in New Zealand, the ”Dunedin Sound” in music, and the Christchurch earthquake.
“The projects in this year’s New Zealand Oral History Awards will capture the stories and memories of a remarkable variety of people, and do it in a way that other forms of history could not,” said Alison Parr, Senior Oral Historian at the Ministry for Culture and Heritage which administers the awards. “The beauty of oral history is in the detail it preserves of individual lives.”
A number of places, ethnic and worker communities as well as individuals will have their oral histories recorded in the coming year.
This year’s successful applicants were selected by a committee of five historians.
All the recordings will go into the Oral History Archive at the Alexander Turnbull Library, where they will be available to researchers. The awards began 22 years ago following a gift from the Australian government to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Treaty of Waitangi.
Successful applicants for the 2011 awards are:
Deborah Dunsford
$10,000
Auckland beach suburb of Milford
NZ Association
of Women Judges $ 8,500
Women judges in New
Zealand
Susan Fowke $10,000
Gisborne and
Tairawhiti citizens
Carol Dawber $10,900
Golden
Bay fishing history
National Dance Archive of New Zealand
$ 8,820
Maori and Pasifika men influential
in NZ contemporary dance
Barbara Inch $
8,000
Christchurch School of Nursing graduates class
1971-1974
Emma Kelly $ 820
Older gay
men in Auckland
Hineani Melbourne
$12,056
Nga Tama Toa
Helen Frizzell and Lesley
Paris $ 9,850
Formation and early period of
the so-called Dunedin Sound
Ann Packer $
2,856
Richard Nunns
Caren
Wilton $13,400
The NZ sex industry
workers
Erolia Ifopo and Sarah Hunter
$10,000
Samoan community in the Christchurch
earthquakes
Julia Brooke-White `
$11,000
New Zealand Wildlife Service
Beth
Shalom $ 3,900
Beth Shalom Progressive Jewish
Congregation
ENDS