Bronx Latino History Project

Title

Bronx Latino History Project

Description

The Bronx Latino History Project is a community-based oral history project of The Bronx County Historical Society.

Background

The Bronx Latino History Project (BLHP) was conceived by The Bronx County Historical Society in 2009, and it yielded a number of research articles and museum exhibits at the Museum of Bronx History during the first decade of its existence. In May 2021, the oral history component of the project took off. Given the Bronx Latino History Project's close ties with the Bronx African American History Project (BAAHP), it has consciously adopted the community-based model and much else from the latter. Further, sharing and cross-listing of oral histories has and will continue to take place between the two projects.

Status

In total, the Bronx Latino History Project currently includes more than 100 oral histories. Our current collection includes oral histories with activists, musicians, workers, small business owners, artists, educators, elected officials, and more.

Goals and Aims

The project aims to include oral histories from every nationality and ethnic group in The Bronx that is commonly identified as "Latino". Much of the work at the current moment focuses on Puerto Rican Bronxites. The project has prioritized and will continue to prioritize the experiences of Afro-Latinos, as well as indigenous peoples of Latin American. Although some oral histories will be recorded with more famous celebrities or politicians in the future, the main focus of the project has been and will continue to be on artists, musicians, activists, workers, poets, authors, professionals, residents of public and affordable housing, etc.

The main goal of the project is twofold: 1) to document the span of the diverse, every-day and extraordinary experiences of Latin American peoples in The Bronx from the mid-twentieth century until the present; and 2) to preserve individual and collective histories that might otherwise be lost or forgotten.

After the oral histories are recorded, a transcript is produced, and the oral histories and transcripts are made available freely to the public in the current online database.

The BLHP intends to form a Community Council, which will advise the project on and participate in soliciting and recording oral histories. The Council will be composed of those who have close ties within their various Bronx communities, who have already recorded an oral history, and who are now willing to take on an even more active role in the project.

Methods

The oral histories recorded through BLHP are meant to focus on a person's experience in The Bronx but can certainly go  beyond that as well. We typically start with some version of the question: "Why don't you tell us a little bit about your family background and how your family ended up in The Bronx?" The interviewer tries to ask broader questions and typically intervenes little otherwise, so that the interviewee can largely determine their own narrative.

BLHP usually records both audio and video of the oral history, although the project adapts to meet the needs of individual interviewees. Some oral histories are recorded in person, some over video-conferencing software, and some over the phone alone.

The oral histories can be recorded in English, Spanish, or some combination, depending on what an interviewee is most comfortable with. Many oral histories might take an hour and a half or two to record, although some interviewees end up breaking their oral history into multiple parts, depending on how much and what they would like to share.

Creator

Bronx Latino History Project

Rights

CC-BY-NC-SA (Creative Commons)

Language

English
Spanish

Type

Oral history collection

Identifier

OH-BLHP

Collection Items

There are currently no items within this collection.

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