Alessandro Portelli’s scientific contributions

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


The Battle of Valle Giulia: Oral History and the Art of Dialogue
  • Article

March 2001

·

908 Reads

·

306 Citations

Journal of American History

Alessandro Portelli

History, we are often taught, is driven by vast social, political, and economic forces. But each political event, each war, each clash in the streets or at the picket lines, is experienced by individuals. It is this profound bond between public history and personal struggle, Alessandro Portelli contends, that gives oral history its significance and its power. In The Battle of Valle Giulia—the title comes from an Italian student protest of the 1960s—Portelli reflects on how to connect personal memories with history, how to fittingly collect and represent the complexity of memory. Crossing cultures, classes, and generations, he records the private and singular experiences of Italian steelworkers and Kentucky coal miners, veterans and refugees of World War II, soldiers who fought in Vietnam, Italian resistance fighters and Nazis, and members of student movements from Berkeley to Rome. By listening to those whom others presume are "without historical memory"—such as youthful protesters, or the rural Tuscan women who saw every father, son, and brother killed by Nazi soldiers—Portelli clarifies the process by which narratives come into being as oral history, and he illustrates the differences and distances between story-telling and history-telling. Portelli's articulate discussion of dialogue, representation, narrative and genre link historical analysis with literary and linguistic theory and with the concerns of contemporary anthropology.

Citations (1)


... This will establish a dialogic space between the meaning expressed by the sources, the interpretation of the historian and the interpretation of the readers. 62 Furthermore, the illustrative quotations will reveal the emigrants' capabilities as tellers of their own story and convey the vividness and punch of the spoken word. ...

Reference:

Britons to America: Oral Narratives of English, Scottish and Welsh Emigrants to the Land of Plenty
The Battle of Valle Giulia: Oral History and the Art of Dialogue
  • Citing Article
  • March 2001

Journal of American History