JAPANESE
AMERICAN RELOCATION ARCHIVE TOPS NEW ORAL HISTORY POPULARITY
RANKINGS
[PDF version]
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Jennifer Heffelfinger
Alexander Street Press, LLC
jheffelfinger@alexanderstreet.com
800-889-5937 ext. 5
(Alexandria, VA – May 17, 2004) Oral histories from the
Japanese American Relocation Digital Archive (JARDA), at the
California Digital Library’s Online Archive of California,
topped Alexander Street Press’s first list of most popular
oral history Web sites.
The Oral History Top 100, which ranks the collections and interviews
most frequently used through Oral History Online, is compiled
quarterly by Alexander Street Press using statistics generated
from their comprehensive Internet-based index to oral histories.
Said Eileen Lawrence, vice president of sales and marketing, “Two
things strike us about these first results. First is the sheer
level of interest in oral histories, which is staggering. In
the past month, usage has gone up several hundred percent, and
we expect to get several thousand visits in the upcoming weeks.
Second, the list shows that people come to oral histories to
hear the voices of diversity. Linda Turner Edmonds’s account
of receiving a polio injection in the segregated South, administered
by the first white people she’d ever seen, topped the list
of most popular interviews.”
Other collections at the top
of the rankings included: “Black
History Oral Histories / Black Women” at Virginia Polytech.; “Conversations
with History 2003” at U.C. Berkeley; “The Civil Rights
Documentation Project” at the University of Southern Mississippi; “Women
in Journalism” by the Washington Press Club Foundation; “The
Whole World was Watching / an Oral History of 1968” at
Brown University; “Tejano Voices” at University of
Texas, Arlington; and the Columbia University Oral History Research
Center’s interviews.
The Oral History Top 100 will be updated
every quarter and will remain freely available at http://alexanderstreet2.com/orhilive.
To view the popularity rankings in their entirety, click the “What’s
Popular” button on the database’s home page.
Oral
History Online is offered free to everyone through May 31 of
this year at http://alexanderstreet.com. After the open access
period ends on June 1, the database is available by subscription.
Reviews are welcome. Please contact Jennifer Heffelfinger,
manager of marketing and public relations (jheffelfinger@alexanderstreet.com
or 800-889-5937 ext. 5).
AWARDED *BEST CONTENT* AND *BEST CONTRACT OPTIONS*
THE CHARLESTON ADVISOR'S 2003 READER'S CHOICE AWARDS
Alexander Street Press, L.L.C., is an academic publisher of electronic full-text
databases in the humanities and social sciences. Founded in June 2000, the
company publishes collections in history, literature, women’s studies,
sociology, ethnic and diversity studies, popular culture, film studies, the
arts, and other areas. Alexander Street Press is located in Alexandria, Virginia.
Editors: For additional information on Alexander Street Press
and its products, please contact
Eileen Lawrence, Vice President, Sales and Marketing, 800-889-5937,
email lawrence@alexanderstreet.com, or visit http://alexanderstreet.com.
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