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Processing the Past - Changing Authorities in History and the Archives (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R3,019
Discovery Miles 30 190
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Processing the Past - Changing Authorities in History and the Archives (Hardcover, New)
Series: Oxford Series on History and Archives
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Processing the Past explores the dramatic changes taking place in
historical understanding and archival management, and hence the
relations between historians and archivists. Written by an
archivist and a historian, it shows how these changes have been
brought on by new historical thinking, new conceptions of archives,
changing notions of historical authority, modifications in archival
practices, and new information technologies. The book takes an
"archival turn" by situating archives as subjects rather than
places of study, and examining the increasingly problematic
relationships between historical and archival work. The book sets
the background to these changes by showing how nineteenth- and
early twentieth-century historians and archivists in Europe and
North American came to occupy the same conceptual and
methodological space. For both, authoritative history was based on
authoritative archives and mutual understandings of scientific
research. The authors then show how these connections changed as
historians began to ask questions not easily answered by
traditional documentation, and archivists began to confront an
unmanageable increase in the amount of material they processed and
the challenges of new electronic technologies. The book situates
these changes in a review of contemporary historical concepts and
archival practices. The authors contend that historians and
archivists have divided into two entirely separate professions with
distinct conceptual frameworks, training, and purposes, as well as
different understandings of the authorities that govern their work.
Processing the Past moves toward bridging this divide by speaking
in one voice to these very different audiences as well as to
general readers. The book concludes by raising the worrisome
question of what future historical archives might be like if
historical scholars and archivists no longer understand each other,
and indeed, whether their now different notions of what is archival
and historical will ever again be joined.
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