About me
I am a participatory public historian and community development practitioner. My research is always place-based and relational, meaning that it usually develops out of conversations with people and things I notice in the places I live and work.
I use oral history methodologies, including creative elicitation methods such using personal archives and photographs or archival films as memory prompts, and place-elicitation by interviewing people at important sites.
My research explores communities of memory and communities and memory.
By communities of memory, I mean communities that come together around a shared past, often related to histories of injustice. These communities can often be described as memory activists – they tell stories about the past to advocate for justice in the present.
Communities also come together in other ways, telling their own stories to find points of synergy and connection. My current research is an ongoing collaboration with Dwellbeing Shieldfield, a community co-operative in the North East of England, exploring the development of 'messy archiving' https://www.dwellbeingshieldfield.org.uk/programmes/community-archive
At Murdoch, my teaching in Community Development focusses on storytelling, collaboration and supervising placement students.
I am open to research supervision for projects using ethnography or oral history methods.
Organisational Affiliations
Highlights - Output
Journal article
Published 2025
Studies in Oral History, 47, 23 - 43
100 People began as an artist residency that explored connections between people and places in an inner-urban part of Newcastle upon Tyne (UK). Recordings of conversations between community members, developed as part of this project, now form the basis of the Dwellbeing Shieldfield Community Archive. Those involved in the process included children and young people, people who had lived in Shieldfield their whole lives and people who had moved to the community from many places; people with high levels of literacy in multiple languages and people for whom written communication is a struggle. This article outlines the participatory and ethical process developed so that the people sharing their stories have control over the outcomes. In this article, we share some of the learnings, challenges and outcomes of this project. This paper is important for any oral historian wanting to reflect on their own ethical practice.
Journal article
Save Our Shipyards: Revisiting a Forgotten History Through Film Elicitation Oral History
Published 2024
Studies in Oral History, 46, 78 - 101
Oral historians regularly use photographs, personal artefacts, or the landscape to access a fuller range of personal feelings and meanings of the past. Yet while archival films are regularly used to stimulate community reminiscence, little has been written about the potentialities of audiovisual elicitation as part of oral history methodology. This paper explores the value of film elicitation methods to revisit a largely forgotten public campaign aimed at halting the closure of shipyards in North East England. We used two short documentary videos as memory prompts for union activists and film producers. The films elicited strong emotional responses, prompting participants to reflect on the gaps between their memories and the ways events were portrayed at the time. In a region where the loss of the shipbuilding industry has significant ongoing social, cultural and economic impacts, the closures are often remembered as a historical inevitability. In contrast, revisiting the films with those who participated in their production offered an opportunity to visit a moment of possibility. We argue that film elicitation is a powerful tool for oral historians who want to explore marginalised histories while avoiding some of the pitfalls of ‘recovery’ oral history.
Book chapter
The Power of Place: Monuments and Memory
Published 2022
The Australian history industry
Australian history has undergone major transformations over the twentieth and twenty first centuries. Started by small groups of antiquarians and novelists, it is today practised in a myriad of ways by millions of Australians. Local, community and family historians spend huge amounts of time and resources investigating the past. The Stolen and Forgotten Generations seek connection and healing through history. The digital revolution has democratised history making and its production and consumption. In the academy, land settlement, politics and great men have been supplanted by Indigenous histories, immigration stories, gender and memory perspectives, cultural, environmental and public history. Through 22 readable chapters by leading practitioners, this book explores the complex, multi-roomed house of Australian history.
Journal article
Remembering experience: Public memorials are not just about the dead anymore
Published 2022
Memory studies, 15, 5, 947 - 962
This article considers a shift in public memorialization towards the remembrance of experience, rather than death. Drawing on research into Australian public memorials to lived experiences of loss and trauma from 1985 to 2015, I compare the trends identified in that research with similar memorial projects internationally. I have found that the emergence of memorials to lived experience is an expression, and an expansion, of the kinds of knowledge that can be remembered publicly, and is influenced by discourses of trauma, human rights and transitional justice.
Journal article
Foodbank Histories: solidarity and mutual aid in the past and the present
Published 27/07/2020
History & Policy
Executive Summary
Oral histories provide insights into how welfare policy has impacted people over the last 100 years.
Working-class traditions of social solidarity and mutual aid are recurring strategies by which people respond to hard times.
A place-based sense of connection continues to provide an important starting point for practices of solidarity and effective care.
Policymakers must listen to the life experiences of those who are living with, or have lived with, poverty and their wider support networks.
DWP policy and state welfare provision must be ‘proofed’ to support citizens who experience life shocks and sudden changes in circumstances.