Tibetan Oral History Archive Project
Developed by Case Western University and the Library of Congress, is a digital archive of oral history interviews with accompanying written transcripts (translated into English) documenting the social and political history of modern Tibet. It includes a large collection of interviews from common folk, monks, and Tibetan and Chinese officials speaking about their lives and modern Tibetan society and history. The first installment, available now, includes 94 interviews conducted in the 1980s and 1990s with Tibetan aristocratic family members from Central Tibet and religious teachers. Future releases will include interviews with "common folk" and monks, especially those who lived in Drepung Monastery before 1959.
Produced by a non-profit organization based in Moraga, California, offers nearly 200 videotaped interviews recorded in 2007 and 2010 with primarily eldertly Tibetan refugees living in Bylakuppe, Mundgod, and Dharmsala, India. The interviewees discuss their experiences of daily life in Tibet, the impact of Chinese Communist rule, and life in exile. The full set of interviews, together with (searchable) English transcripts, is available for loan through the C.V. Starr East Asian Library. For holdings information about the DVDs, and the print and digitized transcripts, see CLIO. A limited selection of the videos are also available online through the Project's website.
This project, started in 2005, make available oral history interviews with 22 members of the Tibetan population living in Minnesota, including youth and elders. See the website for more information and the archived histories. total hours of interviews: 27 hours 20 minutes; transcripts: 670 pages.
Library of Tibetan Works and Archives
The Oral History Department of the Library of Tibetan Works and Archives in Dharamsala, India, has published some 30 volumes of oral histories and recounted by a range of Tibetans with first-hand experience of Tibetan society and life in the mid-twentieth century. LTWA provides an English summary of these histories and the topics covered (e.g. religious life and retreat, the Ganden Phodrang administration, geography and family lineage, artisanship, excape into exile, militia, local history, imprisonment, etc.). In North America, the volumes are available for circulation at Columbia and other university libraries.
World Oral Literature Project
The World Oral Literature Project hosts Online Collections of materials collected by grantees, as well as other heritage recordings. Among these are several Tibetan-related collections, especially from the Amdo region.
Arnold von Bohlen und Halbach: Tibetan Death Rites, 1979
Dorji (Rdo rje don 'grub): Tewo County Collection, 2011
G.yung 'brug: Danba Tibetan Culture Collection, 2008-2010
Katey Blumenthal and Andrea Clearfield: The Folk Music of Lo Monthang, 2008-2009
Kha Bum: Xunhua Tibetan Folk Culture Video Collection, 2008-2010
Molly Loomis: Himalayan Sherpa Collection, 2011
Plateau Culture Heritage Protection Group: Collections from the Tibetan Plateau, 2006-2012
Rdo rje don 'grub: Rka phug Tibetan Village Cultural Materials, 2010
Robert Mayer: Bon po Phur pa Rites at Triten Norbutse, 2010
Yangdon Dhondup: Tantric practitioners from Reb kong, Amdo, Tibet, 2010
.... and more
Columbia University Libraries
The C.V. Starr East Asian Library owns several archival and special collections with interesting materials for original research. These include holdings at the Rare Book and Manuscript Library, the Tharchin Collection (primarily English-language resources), digital verison of the Tibet Mirror, the Lhasa Committee Number Three Records, and the Tibet Information Network (TIN) Archive.
Contact the Tibetan Studies Librarian for more information and access.
Jacques Marchais Museum of Tibetan Art
American Museum of Natural History: see Collection Highlights for Tibet-related collections