Ülepiiriperede pereajalugu internetis – Osalusajalookultuur ja spontaanne ajalookirjutusprotsess




Osalusajalookultuur ja spontaanne ajalookirjutusprotsess

Anne Heimo

PublisherEesti Kirjandusmuuseumi folkloristika osakunna rahvausundi ja meedia tööruhm MTU Eesti Folkloori Instituut

Tartu

2014

Mäetagused

56

1

155

180

1406-9938

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.7592/MT2014.56.heimo

http://www.folklore.ee/tagused/nr56/heimo.pdf



Family history in the digital age: Diasporic genealogy and participatory history culture Since the 1990s there has been a notable increase in family history research and genealogy in many countries. The development and popularity of information and social networking technology has substantially contributed to this boom in family history. Numerous associations, museums, archives, memorials, the media and online projects are actively participating in the collection of family history and migrant memories, to preserve this increasingly transnational heritage for future generations. It has also resulted in a growing interest to search one’s ancestral roots in “the old home country”, to search for family members who have migrated to other parts of the world, or to share one’s own memories of migration with others. In this article the author focuses on Finnish migrants in Australia and their family history activities. Australia as “a nation of migrants“ actively supports its people to engage in family history research and publicly share their experiences of migration with others in many ways as part of its multicultural policy.




Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 18:37