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StoryCorps Collection (AFC 2004/001): Frequently Asked Questions

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How can I listen to an interview? [return to FAQ list]

Researchers can listen to interviews in the American Folklife Center reading room (Jefferson Building, room G53). Please note that not all of the recorded interviews have been received. As the interviews are processed by the StoryCorps staff in New York (only if a signed release has been obtained from the participants), will we receive files from the StoryCorps Project. We highly recommend that researchers contact the American Folklife Center reading room ahead of time and confirm that the interview is available for listening.

Are the interviews online? [return to FAQ list]

National Public Radio makes selected, edited interviews available through their web site. StoryCorps also makes selections from interviews available on their web site. At present, these are the only interviews available online.

How can I get a copy of an interview? [return to FAQ list]

Sound Portraits Productions retains all of the rights and permissions for materials created for the StoryCorps Project. This includes not only interviews, but also photographs taken of the participants. Requests to use StoryCorps materials should be directed to the StoryCorps inquiries page

Persons requesting copies will also need to seek permission of the interviewee and interviewer before the Library of Congress will be able to make copies. Current procedures for phonoduplication requests can be found on the following website: Ordering Copies of Unpublished Recordings from the Archive of Folk Culture Collections.

How many StoryCorps interviews do you have at the American Folklife Center? [return to FAQ list]

We have received more than 10,000 interviews and more than 5,000 participant photos. These are the interviews that have been processed by the StoryCorps staff in New York, and for which release forms have been obtained.

Do you have a database I can search? [return to FAQ list]

The database, in its draft form, is available in the American Folklife Center reading room. It includes only those interviews received thus far by AFC, and not (yet) the interviews to be processed and delivered to us.

I work for a historical/cultural institution, and we’d like all recordings made in this area during the Mobile Booth’s visit. How do we get copies of the interviews? [return to FAQ list]

Please see the answer to the question, “How can I get a copy of the interview?” Alternatively, we suggest that you contact StoryCorps and arrange to have duplicate copies made from their production copies. You will have to work out an agreement with StoryCorps for sharing these files.

Can I listen to the Annie and Danny Perasa interviews? [return to FAQ list]

National Public Radio has sound clips from the interviews on their web site. The full interviews have not yet been received by the Folklife Center. When the interviews are processed, they’ll be sent to us. There is no known timeline for when they’ll arrive.

What is the Griot Initiative? [return to FAQ list]

The following excerpt is from the StoryCorps web site::

“StoryCorps Griot is a one-year initiative, funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, to collect interviews from at least 1,750 African-Americans. From February 15, 2007, through February 28, 2008, the StoryCorps Griot Initiative will make stops of up to six weeks in nine locations across the nation, partnering with radio stations, historically black colleges and universities, and other cultural institutions and membership organizations, to record and distribute the stories of 1,750 African-Americans. The StoryCorps Griot Initiative will place a special emphasis on the stories of World War II veterans and men and women involved in the Civil Rights struggle.”

Interviews from the initiative will be archived both at the American Folklife Center, and also at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture.

Do you have photos of the people participating in the interviews (interview subjects and interviewers)? [return to FAQ list]

Photographs are taken at the time of the interview, although it’s not certain if all interviewers and interviewees have been photographed. Once these photos are processed by StoryCorps staff in New York, they will be added to the StoryCorps Collection here at the American Folklife Center and will be available for viewing in the reading room.

Go to the StoryCorps Project Web site.

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  April 17, 2008
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