The National Japanese American Historical Society (NJAHS) and the Tule Lake Committee are collaborating in the collection of oral histories of former Tule Lake internees.
Digital interview recordings of Japanese Americans relating to immigration to the United States from Japan, internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, and the postwar Japanese American community. Interviews conducted by Kaoru Ueda. Includes images of diaries, newsletters and other textual material.
extensive Japanese American Oral History Project (JAOHP) was launched in 1972 at the urging of a then CSUF undergraduate history major, Betty E. Mitson. Interviews were done with two categories of "analysts"—novelists (Georgia Day Robertson and George Nakagawa) and social scientists (Togo Tanaka, Robert Spencer, and James Sakoda).
Personal accounts of individuals who were placed into internment camps following the bombing of Pearl Harbor, and accounts of people who assisted in the relocation of Japanese American students from the camps to colleges and universities around the country.
The Institute for Asian American Studies (IAAS), in partnership with the Chinese Historical Society of New England, has been interviewing Chinese Americans who owned, or whose parents owned, a laundry in Massachusetts.
KADA's oral history collections include interviews from several sources. The sound recordings of these interviews are included in this section of the database and can be listen to and there are, as well, transcriptions available for some.
The life stories of Vietnamese Americans in Southern California. The project contributes to expanding archives on Vietnamese Americans with the primary goal of capturing first generation stories for students, researchers, and the community
Collection of oral histories focused on South Asian American experiences. Accompanying book titled "Our stories: an Introduction to South Asian America" is available at Duke Libraries.
The Asian American History Project (ASAH) is an archive of Oral History interviews conducted with Asian Americans within the University of Florida, and throughout the greater South. The collection aims to record the experiences of Asian Americans students at UF, as well as the broader Asian American Experience.
Currently, the oral history project mainly includes interviews with Southeast Asians who arrived in the Greater Lowell, Massachusetts, area during 1970-1990s. To a smaller extent, the project also includes Southeast Asians and individuals who worked with Southeast Asian communities covering the geographical region of Massachusetts.
This collection of oral histories, hosted by the Museum of Chinese in America (MOCA), chronicles the unprecedented challenges that affected East Coast Chinese American communities during the COVID-19 pandemic.
While not an oral history per se, this StoryMaps project provides a great entrypoint, including many digitized primary materials, into further research on the history of Asian American communities living in the St. Louis, Missouri.