Archive Stories: Facts, Fictions, and the Writing of HistoryAntoinette Burton Duke University Press, 25 Á.¤. 2006 - 408 ˹éÒ Despite the importance of archives to the profession of history, there is very little written about actual encounters with them—about the effect that the researcher’s race, gender, or class may have on her experience within them or about the impact that archival surveillance, architecture, or bureaucracy might have on the histories that are ultimately written. This provocative collection initiates a vital conversation about how archives around the world are constructed, policed, manipulated, and experienced. It challenges the claims to objectivity associated with the traditional archive by telling stories that illuminate its power to shape the narratives that are “found” there. Archive Stories brings together ethnographies of the archival world, most of which are written by historians. Some contributors recount their own experiences. One offers a moving reflection on how the relative wealth and prestige of Western researchers can gain them entry to collections such as Uzbekistan’s newly formed Central State Archive, which severely limits the access of Uzbek researchers. Others explore the genealogies of specific archives, from one of the most influential archival institutions in the modern West, the Archives nationales in Paris, to the significant archives of the Bakunin family in Russia, which were saved largely through the efforts of one family member. Still others explore the impact of current events on the analysis of particular archives. A contributor tells of researching the 1976 Soweto riots in the politically charged atmosphere of the early 1990s, just as apartheid in South Africa was coming to an end. A number of the essays question what counts as an archive—and what counts as history—as they consider oral histories, cyberspace, fiction, and plans for streets and buildings that were never built, for histories that never materialized. Contributors. Tony Ballantyne, Marilyn Booth, Antoinette Burton, Ann Curthoys, Peter Fritzsche, Durba Ghosh, Laura Mayhall, Jennifer S. Milligan, Kathryn J. Oberdeck, Adele Perry, Helena Pohlandt-McCormick, John Randolph, Craig Robertson, Horacio N. Roque Ramírez, Jeff Sahadeo, Reneé Sentilles |
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... Women's History Review 4, 3 (1996): 319–44 and is reprinted with permission from Triangle Journals. Aversion of Craig Robertson's essay, ''Mechanisms of Exclusion: Histor- icizing the Archive and the Passport,'' was published as ''The ...
... woman seeking evidence of Indian women either silenced or marginalized by the colonial state and its archives, she was not only reading the archives, the archives were also reading her. As important, her determination to find traces of ...
... women's su√rage movement in the wake of women's formal emancipation after World War I, was spearheaded by those who had been active in or sympathetic to The Cause. To be sure, most if not all institutionalized archival collections bear ...
... women characters in the public sphere, complicates our notions of what an archive is, whom it houses, and how dynamically it responds to and is shaped by local pressures, in both a temporal and geographical sense. Straining against all ...
... Women and Historical Practice (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2000); and Rolf Torstendahl, ''Fact ... Women's Studies Association Introduction 23.
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25 | |
Official Archives and CounterHistories | 157 |
The Past in the Present | 297 |
Select Bibliography | 375 |
Contributors | 381 |
Index | 385 |