Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Ronald Fraser

    Ronald Fraser was a pioneering oral historian, renowned for his deeply humanistic approach to chronicling pivotal historical events. He masterfully wove together personal testimonies to bring the past to life, offering readers intimate perspectives on momentous struggles. His work is characterized by a profound commitment to understanding history through the collective memory of individuals. Fraser's distinctive method illuminated the lived experiences that shaped major historical narratives.

    Im Versteck
    Financial Times
    In Search of a Past
    Napoleon's Cursed War: Spanish Popular Resistance in the Peninsular War, 1808-14
    • Focusing on the experiences of ordinary people during a significant historical period, the narrative presents a vivid account of their lives, often overlooked in traditional histories. The author, recognized for his traditional historiographical approach, sheds light on the voices that typically remain silent, offering a fresh perspective on the events and their impact on the everyday lives of individuals. This emphasis on the common man's experience provides a deeper understanding of the historical context.

      Napoleon's Cursed War: Spanish Popular Resistance in the Peninsular War, 1808-14
    • In Search of a Past

      The Manor House, Amnersfield, 1933-1945

      • 187 pages
      • 7 hours of reading
      3.7(17)Add rating

      Ronald Fraser, the internationally renowned oral historian, turns his attention to his own origins in this remarkable memoir. In Search of a Past gathers the recollections of the servants who worked at the manor house outside London where Fraser grew up. It was the place where his parents—one American, the other Scottish—learned to embrace the lifestyle of the idle local gentry. Fraser paints a vivid picture of a vanished interwar world. Sensitively recorded, the words of his family’s former employees capture the texture of English “county” life as seen from below, woven into a background of their personal lives, their work and the social antagonisms they experienced. Beneath their stories, however, the author glimpses another unspoken narrative—that of his own childhood. He submits to a course of psychoanalysis and delves into a past riven by confusing emotions and conflicting class allegiances. The result is an innovative, honest, and beautifully written account of the search for lost time, one that defies literary categorization.

      In Search of a Past