Everyone has a story to tell.
Stories about meeting your spouse for the first time. Stories about survival.
Stories about glory days. Stories about ordinary people that become
extraordinary when voiced authentically. |
|
The spoken word was once our only history, responsible for imparting both fact
and fiction to future generations. Oral history has lost some currency recently,
but one project hopes to change that.
StoryCorps is a creation of Sound
Portraits Productions, an independent production company based in New York City.
Modeled after the Works Progress Administration (WPA) of the 1930s, it’s a
national project that aims to instruct and inspire people to record each others'
stories in sound.
From 1936 to 1940, the WPA’s Federal Writers’ Project employed hundreds of
writers to conduct oral-history interviews with Americans and document their
stories. Characterized by some as the federal government’s attempt to
"democratize American culture," the project gathered what remains the most
important collection of American voices to date. StoryCorps hopes to build and
expand on that work, becoming a WPA for the 21st Century.
Like the WPA’s Federal Writers’ Project, the oral histories gathered by
StoryCorps will be stored at the Library of Congress and will be accessible to
future generations. Unlike the WPA, however, StoryCorps will not employ writers
to collect these stories. StoryCorps is inviting people to interview one
another.
"We've found that the process of interviewing a friend, neighbor, or family
member can have a profound impact on both the interviewer and the interviewee,”
says David Isay, the award-winning producer behind StoryCorps. “We’ve seen
people change, friendships grow, families walk away feeling closer,
understanding each other better."
Isay started StoryCorps in 2003, by opening the first soundproof “StoryBooth” in
New York’s Grand Central Station. In 2005, the project hit the road for its
first national tour with two custom-built “MobileBooth” trailers outfitted with
recording studios. Over the course of 10 years, he hopes to travel around the
country collecting the stories of over 250,000 Americans.
Participants come to the booths to record personal stories that are important to
them. A trained StoryCorps facilitator guides the interview and handles all of
the technical aspects involved in recording it. At the end of a 40-minute
session, participants walk away with a CD recording of the interview, and with
their permission, a copy of the CD is sent to the Library of Congress.
In addition to preserving these stories in the Library of Congress, StoryCorps
shares interview excerpts every Friday during NPR’s Morning Edition.
Listeners across the country have heard veterans talking about their years of
military service, a grandmother imparting advice on marriage, a birthmother
explaining why she gave her son up for adoption, and survivors of 9/11 recalling
their experiences. The stories vary greatly in both subject and narrative voice,
and as a collection present a rich and textured picture of American life.
"StoryCorps is a manifestation of the ten-year mission of Sound Portraits
Productions,” explains Isay. “[We strive] to tell the stories of ordinary
Americans with dignity, celebrating the power and poetry in their words. We
believe that listening is an act of love, and that StoryCorps will engage
communities, teach participants to become better listeners, foster
intergenerational communication, and help Americans appreciate the strength in
the stories of everyday people they find all around them."
|
|
Summary
|
|
Independent producer Dave Isay turns the microphones over to the masses with StoryCorps, a national initiative to reach and inspire Americans from all walks of life to record meaningful oral histories with family members and friends.
|
|
StoryCorps in Wenatchee sponsored by:
|

 |
 |