Investigating the relationship between archives and information in the early modern world, this latest collection of essays edited by Kate Peters, Alexandra Walsham, and Liesbeth Corens explores every aspect of record keeping; from the proliferation of physical documentation between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries to the implication of archives in patterns of statecraft.
Contributors to Archives and Information in the Early Modern World place paper technologies and physical repositories under the microscope, analysing the connections between documentation and geographical distance, probing the part played by record-keeping in administration, governance, and justice, as well as its links with trade, commerce, education, evangelism, and piety.
Extending beyond the framework of formal institutions to the family, household, and sect, Archives and Information in the Early Modern World offers fresh insight into the possibilities and constraints of political participation and the nature of human agency. It deepens our understanding of the role of archives in the construction and preservation of knowledge and the exercise of power in its broadest sense, calling for greater dialogue and creative collaboration to breach the lingering disciplinary divide between historians and archival scientists.
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This collection of essays explores the history of archives and record keeping across different polities and cultures in the early modern world. With ground-breaking research into the mechanics and personnel of early modern archives, the collection provides invaluable accounts of the history of keeping historical records.
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Eric Ketelaar: Foreword
Alexandra Walsham, Kate Peters & Liesbeth Corens: Archives and Information in the Early Modern World
Organisation and Agency
1: Randolph C. Head: Early Modern European Archivality: Organised Records, Information, and State Power around 1500
2: Filippo de Vivo: Archival Intelligence: Diplomatic Correspondence, Information Overload, and Information Management in Italy, 1450-1650
3: Jacob Soll: Jean-Baptiste Colbert, Accounting, and the Genesis of the State Archive in Early Modern France
Access and Secrecy
4: Arnold Hunt: The Early Modern Secretary and the Early Modern Archive
5: Arndt Brendecke: Knowledge, Oblivion and Concealment in Early Modern Spain: The Ambiguous Agenda of the Archive of Simancas
6: Kate Peters: 'Friction in the Archives': Access and the Politics of Record-Keeping in Revolutionary England
Media and Materiality
7: Heather Wolfe & Peter Stallybrass: The Material Culture of Record Keeping in Early Modern England
8: Sundar Henny: Archiving the Archive: Scribal and Material Culture in Seventeenth-Century Zurich
Documentation and Distance
9: Brooke Palmieri: Truth and Suffering in the Quaker Archives
10: Sylvia Sellers-Garcia: Death, Distance, and Bureaucracy: An Archival Story
11: Kiri Paramore: A Transnational Archive of the Sinosphere: The Early Modern East Asian Information Order
Ann Blair: Afterword
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it should be on the reading list of every student interested in the history of archives. Taken together with similar developments in the history of paper, diplomatic letterwriting, the news, and court history, these contributions promise to turn a history of text-as-discourse into a social history of texts as intellectual, social, and material artifacts.
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Investigates how archives have been shaped by history
Examines a wide range of archives form across the globe
Explores how the practice of record keeping was established and developed over time
Features contributions from a variety of notable academics
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Kate Peters trained as an archivist in 1988-89 and completed a PhD in History in 1996. She has lectured in records and archives management at UCL, and in History at Universities of Birmingham and Cambridge. Her first book, Print Culture and the Early Quakers, examined the role of print in the early Quaker movement of the 1650s. She is currently working on the politics of record keeping in the English civil wars. Alexandra Walsham is a graduate of the
Universities of Melbourne and Cambridge. She taught at the University of Exeter for many years before taking up her current appointment at Cambridge. She has published widely on the religious and cultural history
of early modern England and her current research, supported by a Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship, explores the intersections between the Reformation and generational change. She is also the Principal Investigator of the AHRC project, 'Remembering the Reformation'. She became a Fellow of the British Academy in 2009 and was made a CBE in 2017. Liesbeth Corens is Career Development Fellow at Keble College, Oxford. She is currently completing a book manuscript on Confessional Mobility and
English Catholics in Counter-Reformation Europe for Oxford University Press. Her other project centres on creating counter-archives among Catholic minorities in early modern England and the Netherlands.
With Kate Peters and Alexandra Walsham, she co-edited 'The Social History of the Archives: Record-Keeping in Early Modern Europe', Past and Present, supplement 11 (2016).
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Investigates how archives have been shaped by history
Examines a wide range of archives form across the globe
Explores how the practice of record keeping was established and developed over time
Features contributions from a variety of notable academics
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780197266250
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
698 gr
Høyde
242 mm
Bredde
163 mm
Dybde
27 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
350