Burke's book, the culmination of thirty-five years in the archive profession spent mostly working with private papers, reminds us that personal papers are a superb asset for research and for preserving knowledge of the past.

Archavia

The present book is the product of [the author's] teaching manuscript administration courses. This experience leads to the keen insight of this work in providing suggestions for research in archives...Burke's final chapter on digital archives will intrigue many future archivists...clear and insightful direction...

Lisca

In this absorbing new book, Frank Burke shares his lifetime of insights into the American manuscript tradition. As an archivist, administrator, and teacher, Burke has acquired a keen insight into the preservation and access to our documentary heritage and that wisdom is bound up in this book...destined to become an archival classic.

A Modern Archives Reader

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Frank Burke takes on the task of educating researchers in the use and administration of archives and manuscript collections...Burke gives researchers a solid place to start...there is much to be learned from this book and all readers will benefit greatly from it.

New England Archivists

A valuable handbook for anyone who needs to examine and analyze manuscript sources.

Zentralblatt für Geologie und Paläontologie

Burke's anecdotal style is engaging and readable...this volume...has much to offer...students and historians alike will find this a very useful book...a welcome addition to the growing body of specialized literature on archives and manuscripts.

The Public Historian

Burke has brought the world of private papers to life...provides an in-depth analysis...accessible to and prized by university and professional researchers.

Archivaria

Every serious researcher should have this book in his library, or at least spend 4-5 hours at the library reading it.

Western Pennsylvania Genealogical Society Quarterly

Fortunately for researchers and archivists alike, the publication of this splendid book should go far toward providing graduate students and other budding researchers with fundamental skills and knowledge that will enable them to exploit research materials wisely and effectively. It should be required reading in every doctoral and archives program in the nation.

The American Archivist

Researchers faced with using documentary sources for the first time, such as correspondence, diaries, and literary manuscripts, are plunged into a world far different from the familiar library setting, with its card or computer catalogs, bibliographies, and other resource-finding tools. Over and over, studies of research methodology among scholars reveal that they learn by some sort of collegial osmosis and general fumbling about until they figure things out. There is an easier way. Burke explains the professional techniques employed by archivists and manuscript curators, describing what they do and why, so the beginning researcher has a foundation for understanding how to search and access personal papers. Burke surveys problems of organization, access, alternative sources, and legal issues with amusing anecdotes and examples. Research and the Manuscript Tradition is a reflection on using manuscripts for research, administering manuscript and archival collections and institutions, and the lessons learned from teaching a manuscripts administration course for more than twenty years. It provides a solid theoretical base as well as practical advice and a glimpse of the satisfaction that can come from working with personal papers. Contents: Yuan Shih-Kai, Harriet Monroe, and the Manuscript Tradition; The Recovery of Reality; Opening the Doors to Scholarship; Gathering the Evidence; Mapping the Roads to the Past; Tradition Confronts Technology; Organizing a Life; Good Deeds Do Not Go Unrewarded; The Cultural Crypt; Not by Vaults and Locks...; Law, Curatorial Ethics, and the Researcher; Personal Communication in the Electronic Age.
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In this text, Frank Burke reveals the professional techniques employed by archivists and manuscript curators, explaining what is done and why, so the the beginning researcher has a foundation for understanding how to search and access documentary sources.
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Part 1 Preface Part 2 Introduction Chapter 3 1 Yean Shih-Kai, Harriet Monroe, and the Manuscript Tradition Chapter 4 2. The Recovery of Reality Chapter 5 3. Opening the Doors to Scholarship Chapter 6 4. Gathering the Evidence Chapter 7 5. Mapping the Roads to the Past Chapter 8 6. Tradition confronts Technology Chapter 9 7. Organizing a life Chapter 10 8. Good deeds do not go unrewarded Chapter 11 9. The cultural crypt Chapter 12 10. Not by Vaults and Locks... Chapter 13 11. Law, Curatorial Ethics, and the Researcher Chapter 14 12. Personal Communication in the Electronic Age Part 15 Appendix: Freedom of Information Act Exemptions Part 16 Glossary of Terms Part 17 Bibliography Part 18 Index Part 19 About the Author
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780810833487
Publisert
1997-11-20
Utgiver
Scarecrow Press; Scarecrow Press
Vekt
535 gr
Høyde
224 mm
Bredde
145 mm
Dybde
24 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
320

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Frank G. Burke is Professor Emeritus, College of Library and Information Services, University of Maryland at College Park. Over the past thirty-five years he has held positions of responsibility at the University of Chicago Special Collections, the Library of Congress Manuscript Division, and the National Archives.