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- catalog abstract "Since 1980, The Tape-Recorded Interview has been an essential resource for folklorists and oral historians - indeed, for anyone who uses a tape recorder in field research. When this book was first published, the reel-to-reel recorder was the favored format for fieldwork. Because the cassette recorder has almost completely replaced it, Ives has revised the first chapter, "How a Tape Recorder Works," accordingly and has included a useful discussion of the differences between analog and digital recording. He has also added a brief section on video, updated the bibliography, and reworked his original comments on tape cataloguing and transcription. As in the first edition, Ives's emphasis is on documenting the lives of common men and women. He offers a careful, step-by-step tour through the collection process - finding informants, making advance preparations, conducting the actual interview, obtaining a release - and then describes the procedures for processing the taped interview and archiving such materials for future use. He also gives special treatment to such topics as recording music, handling group interviews, and using photographs or other visual material during interviews.".
- catalog contributor b8328567.
- catalog contributor b8328568.
- catalog created "c1995.".
- catalog date "1995".
- catalog date "c1995.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1995.".
- catalog description "1. How a tape recorder works -- Cassette versus reel-to-reel -- Analog versus DAT -- How about stereo? -- Power supply -- The controls -- Indicators -- The tape transport system -- The heads -- Half-track, stereo, and all that -- Cassettes -- The microphone -- "The game" -- Immediate action: When "it won't go" -- 2. Interviewing -- Finding people to interview -- The initial contact -- The preliminary interview -- Advance preparations -- The diary or journal -- The interview -- Interviewing with a camcorder -- Some special problems -- Obtaining a release -- A final word on interviewing -- 3. Processing -- The primary document -- Making a transcript -- Final disposition and future use -- On the publication of oral materials -- Appendix: A compendium of forms.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. [103]-108) and index.".
- catalog description "Since 1980, The Tape-Recorded Interview has been an essential resource for folklorists and oral historians - indeed, for anyone who uses a tape recorder in field research. When this book was first published, the reel-to-reel recorder was the favored format for fieldwork. Because the cassette recorder has almost completely replaced it, Ives has revised the first chapter, "How a Tape Recorder Works," accordingly and has included a useful discussion of the differences between analog and digital recording. He has also added a brief section on video, updated the bibliography, and reworked his original comments on tape cataloguing and transcription. As in the first edition, Ives's emphasis is on documenting the lives of common men and women. He offers a careful, step-by-step tour through the collection process - finding informants, making advance preparations, conducting the actual interview, obtaining a release - and then describes the procedures for processing the taped interview and archiving such materials for future use. He also gives special treatment to such topics as recording music, handling group interviews, and using photographs or other visual material during interviews.".
- catalog extent "xii, 112 p. :".
- catalog identifier "0870498789 (pbk. : alk. paper)".
- catalog issued "1995".
- catalog issued "c1995.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Knoxville : University of Tennessee Press,".
- catalog subject "390/.072 20".
- catalog subject "Folklore Fieldwork.".
- catalog subject "Folklore Methodology.".
- catalog subject "GR45.5 .I93 1995".
- catalog subject "Magnetic recorders and recording.".
- catalog subject "Oral history.".
- catalog tableOfContents "1. How a tape recorder works -- Cassette versus reel-to-reel -- Analog versus DAT -- How about stereo? -- Power supply -- The controls -- Indicators -- The tape transport system -- The heads -- Half-track, stereo, and all that -- Cassettes -- The microphone -- "The game" -- Immediate action: When "it won't go" -- 2. Interviewing -- Finding people to interview -- The initial contact -- The preliminary interview -- Advance preparations -- The diary or journal -- The interview -- Interviewing with a camcorder -- Some special problems -- Obtaining a release -- A final word on interviewing -- 3. Processing -- The primary document -- Making a transcript -- Final disposition and future use -- On the publication of oral materials -- Appendix: A compendium of forms.".
- catalog title "The tape-recorded interview : a manual for field workers in folklore and oral history / Edward D. Ives.".
- catalog type "text".