Weekend Cooking – Food with a difference

There is a fascinating and slightly unusual archive here in the UK called the Mass Observation Study, which was started in 1937.Then last week I received an on-line article, published in the Financial Times titled History in the Speaking which looks at the tape recordings and therefore archive from the rich, famous and regular person in the street.

The recordings make up an incredible oral archive housed at the British Library. The archive has focused on various projects and is very varied from the Living Memory of the Jewish Community which was collated between 1988 and 1993 to An Oral History of Tesco, the Supermarket chain based here in the UK, which ran between 2003 – 2007. Some of the Oral archives are available to be listened too and others closed until the author’s death.

A food project ran between 2000-2001 and now hosts more than 200 references and some of the oral archive can be listened to on-line. (I hope those outside of the UK can access the wonderful & thought provoking resource).

About Julie Goucher

Genealogist, Author, Presenter, native Guildfordian, avid note taker and journal writer. Lover of Books, Stationery & History; Surnames, Butcher & Orlando One-Name Studies. Pharos Tutor for all One-Name Studies/surname courses as well as Researching Ancestors from Continental Europe.
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8 Responses to Weekend Cooking – Food with a difference

  1. I used to shop at Tesco when I was at school in England. Thanks for the links — I will go investigate.

    Rose City Reader

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  2. Beth F says:

    Thanks so much for writing about this — I've bookmarked the links — there's some good reading there.

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  3. Vicki says:

    I'm going to have to set some time aside to spend checking those links out. Very interesting!
    Here's My WC

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  4. Margot says:

    I enjoy reading and listening to oral histories of ordinary events. This sounds very interesting.

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  5. Marg says:

    I could spend hours on some of those links! Thanks!

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  6. caite says:

    wow, an interesting article there in the Times. I have to look at this further.

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  7. Uniflame says:

    This is kind of fascinating

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  8. TheBookGirl says:

    How interesting. All that food history in one place. I clicked on some of the links, and it works just fine outside the UK.

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