100 results
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2. An Additional Note on the Rawlinson Papers.
- Author
-
PARSONS, ROGER
- Subjects
ARCHIVES ,CUNEIFORM inscriptions - Abstract
The article discusses the correspondence in the Royal Asiatic Society's (RAS) archives that offers more details on the acquisition of its Rawlinson papers. Topics covered include a letter from archivist Elmira Wade to the RAS on June 26, 1972, the appointment of Wade at Corsham Court in Wiltshire, England, and the disposal of the Rawlinson papers.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Major accessions to repositories relating to Irish history, 2015.
- Subjects
ARCHIVES ,IRISH history - Abstract
The article lists repositories on Irish history in Great Britain and Ireland including Historical Manuscripts Commission (T.N.A. H.M.C.) National Register of Archives, and Directory of Irish archives.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The State of the Records of the Federation Union of Black Artists at the Johannesburg Art Gallery: An Overview.
- Author
-
Maaba, Brown
- Subjects
PUBLIC records ,COMMERCIAL art galleries ,BLACK art ,VISUAL fields ,ART - Abstract
Copyright of History in Africa: A Journal of Method is the property of Cambridge University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The archive of a Ugandan missionary. Writings by and about Revd Apolo Kivebulaya (1890s–1950s).
- Author
-
Peterson, Derek R.
- Subjects
MISSIONARIES ,SOCIAL status ,KINGDOM of God ,ARCHIVES ,ENGLISH language usage - Abstract
Kivebulaya's contemporaries among Buganda's Protestant elite were avid assemblers of archives and committed authors of historical narrative. This book makes Kivebulaya's archive accessible and intelligible. For his Ganda compatriots Kivebulaya's career was a form of outreach, an index of the civilisational hierarchy that separated Buganda from its uncivil neighbours. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The IAU C41 Working Groups and their contribution to international history of astronomy research.
- Author
-
Orchiston, Wayne, Sterken, Christiaan, Hearnshaw, John, and Valls-Gabaud, David
- Abstract
IAU Commission 41 (History of Astronomy) was founded in 1948, and between 1991 and its termination in 2015 this Commission hosted seven different Working Groups (one of which was shared with Commission 40 (Radio Astronomy). In this paper we list the objectives of these seven Working Groups and track their progress. We conclude by evaluating the role that each C41 Working Group played in furthering research on the history of astronomy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. LEONARD SAVAGE, THE ELLSBERG PARADOX, AND THE DEBATE ON SUBJECTIVE PROBABILITIES: EVIDENCE FROM THE ARCHIVES.
- Author
-
Zappia, Carlo
- Subjects
RATIONAL choice theory ,MATHEMATICAL logic ,PARADOX ,ARCHIVES ,PROBABILITY theory - Abstract
This paper explores archival material concerning the reception of Leonard J. Savage's foundational work of rational choice theory in its subjective-Bayesian form. The focus is on the criticism raised in the early 1960s by Daniel Ellsberg, William Fellner, and Cedric Smith, who were supporters of the newly developed subjective approach but could not understand Savage's insistence on the strict version he shared with Bruno de Finetti. The episode is well known, thanks to the so-called Ellsberg Paradox and the extensive reference made to it in current decision theory. But Savage's reaction to his critics has never been examined. Although Savage never really engaged with the issue in his published writings, the private exchange with Ellsberg and Fellner, and with de Finetti about how to deal with Smith, shows that Savage's attention to the generalization advocated by his correspondents was substantive. In particular, Savage's defense of the normative value of rational choice theory against counterexamples such as Ellsberg's did not prevent him from admitting that he would give careful consideration to a more realistic axiomatic system, should the critics be able to provide one. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. As the Forest is Chopped, the Chips Fly: The Fall of Soviet Internationalism and Late Perestroika's "Refugee" Problem, 1988–1990.
- Author
-
Austin, Lyudmila B.
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONALISM , *ARCHIVES , *REFUGEES , *SOCIAL problems , *COMMUNITIES - Abstract
By 1989, at least one in five Soviet citizens lived outside of "their" titular territories or did not have one, yet their lived experiences—especially poignant when the USSR dissolved—are not well understood. Using archival evidence and oral interviews, this paper focuses on two events pivotal to these communities: fatal unrest over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh territory from 1988–1990, the first perestroika conflict that produced the phenomenon of Soviet "refugees" in the country; and the Fergana Valley Massacre of June 1989, the first mass casualty event in Central Asia that displaced tens of thousands more. It argues that these conflicts became major regional and Soviet-wide issues that exposed the growing impotency of the center and contributed widely to the impetus to flight. This paper underscores how Soviet internationalism created the foundation for intercommunal "groupness," or the various cross-ethnic nexuses that became especially apparent vis-à-vis these episodes of titular violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Yvonne Rainer's Archive.
- Author
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Coates, Emily
- Subjects
CHOREOGRAPHY ,ARCHIVES ,CHOREOGRAPHERS ,ARTISTS ,READING - Abstract
A close reading of Yvonne Rainer's archival papers reveals new insights into the postmodern iconoclast. Revivifying Rainer's early choreographic practice and verbalembodied explorations, Rainer's own notes and journals illuminate and challenge reductive interpretations of a writing dance artist's work over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. 'On which they (merely) held drones': Fugitive Tapes from the Theatre of Eternal Music Archive, 1963–6.
- Author
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NICKLESON, PATRICK
- Subjects
MUSIC archives ,AVANT-garde music ,FUGITIVES from justice ,MUSIC fans ,SAXOPHONE ,PRODUCT counterfeiting ,ARCHIVES - Abstract
Between 1963 and 1966, John Cale, Tony Conrad, La Monte Young, Marian Zazeela and a handful of other collaborators rehearsed together on a daily basis. Held since then in the archive at Young and Zazeela's Church Street apartment in New York City, the tapes of the Theatre of Eternal Music have become obscure objects of fascination and mystery for experimental music fans. They have also been at the centre of disputes over the authorial propriety of the drones that they record. This paper offers a material history of those tapes as they circulate online. By tracking and organizing the available bootlegs, I trace the ensemble's changing sonic self-conception as it moved from a composer-led ensemble supporting Young's saxophone improvisations to an egalitarian collective constituted in its dedication to the daily practice of listening from 'inside the sound'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. "A Book One Can with Complete Confidence Call Important": Albert Erskine, Ralph Ellison, and the Publishing of Invisible Man.
- Author
-
KING, DANIEL ROBERT
- Subjects
AFRICAN American authors ,ARCHIVES ,PUBLISHING ,CONFIDENCE - Abstract
In this article I examine the editing and publishing of Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man by Albert Erskine. Over the course of the piece, I deploy letters, drafts, and other material drawn from both Ellison's archive in the Library of Congress and Erskine's own archive at the University of Virginia to unpack how Erskine, as a white editor at a powerful international publishing house, conceived of his role in shepherding to market and marketing what he saw as a major literary work by an African American author. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. A New Chapter in Namibian History: Reflections on Archival Research.
- Author
-
van der Hoog, Tycho
- Subjects
HISTORY of archives ,ARCHIVAL research ,ARCHIVES ,STATE government archives ,SOUTH African history ,GERMAN Unification, 1990 ,HISTORIANS ,EMBARGO - Abstract
Copyright of History in Africa: A Journal of Method is the property of Cambridge University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. De-standardising ageing? Shifting regimes of age measurement.
- Author
-
MOREIRA, TIAGO
- Subjects
AGING ,ARCHIVES ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,HEALTH ,INTERVIEWING ,LONGEVITY ,MEDLINE ,ONLINE information services ,RESEARCH funding ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,BIBLIOGRAPHIC databases ,LABELING theory - Abstract
Departing from the proposition that, in the sociological debate about whether there has been a shift towards a de-standardised lifecourse in advanced economies, little attention has been devoted to the infrastructural arrangements that would support such a transition, this paper explores the changing role of standards in the governance of ageing societies. In it, I outline a sociological theory of age standard substitution which suggests that contradictory rationalities used in the implementation of chronological age fuelled the emergence of a critique of chronological age within the diverse strands of gerontological knowledge during the 20th century. The paper analyses how these critiques were linked to a proliferation of substitute, ‘personalised’ age standards that aimed to conjoin individuals’ unique capacities or needs to roles or services. The paper suggests that this configuration of age standards’ production, characterised by uncertainty and an opening of moral and epistemic possibilities, has been shrouded by another, more recent formation where institutional responses to decentred processes of standardisation moved research and political investment towards an emphasis on biological age measurement. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Richard Pace and the Psalms.
- Author
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WADE, TIM
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC libraries , *HUMANISTS , *ARCHIVES , *NATIONAL archives , *PUBLIC records , *BUSINESS records - Abstract
In the library of Winchester College is a multi-lingual psalter formerly owned by the diplomat and scholar, Richard Pace (c.1483–1536). Pace left extensive notes in this volume, the product of his study of the Hebrew Scriptures in comparison with the Vulgate and Greek Septuagint. They demonstrate his engagement with a variety of Jewish, patristic and humanist learning. A broader set of theological and devotional themes also emerge. For Pace, the Psalms were primarily a prophetic text, foretelling the coming of Christ and the Gospels, but they likewise reflected an interest in devotion, rhetoric and prayer typical of humanists of the period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Beyond the Islamicate Chancery: Archives, Paperwork, and Textual Encounters across Eurasia, a Preface.
- Author
-
Sartori, Paolo
- Abstract
This thematic issue of Itinerario brings together a selection of papers presented at the international conference Beyond the Islamicate Chancery: Archives, Paperwork, and Textual Encounters across Eurasia, which was held at the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna in early October 2018. The conference was the third instalment in a series of collaborations between the Institute of Iranian Studies at the Austrian Academy of Sciences and the University of Pittsburgh examining Islamicate cultures of documentation from different angles. Surviving precolonial and colonial chancery archives across Eurasia provide an unparalleled glimpse into the inner workings of connectivity across writing cultures and, especially, documentary practices. This particular meeting has attempted to situate what has traditionally been a highly technical discipline in a broader historical dialogue on the relationship between state power, the archive, and cultural encounters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Remembering Durban's "Grey Street Casbah and surrounding": Creating Urban History through Digital Spaces.
- Author
-
Hoyer, Cacee
- Subjects
CENTRAL business districts ,URBAN history ,ARCHIVES ,PUBLIC spaces ,MEMORY - Abstract
The "Grey Street Casbah and surrounding" is a closed Facebook group about the historically "Indian" neighborhood in downtown Durban, South Africa. It creates an informal archival repository and provides a new space to reify contemporary understandings of historical places within the Durban Central Business District. The informal nature of this space allows the layperson the ability to participate in historical inquiry and exhibits the diverse ways places in Durban are remembered and memorialized. In this paper, I argue the wealth of knowledge generated on informal online platforms, such as this Facebook group, should influence and inform historical interpretations of our urban pasts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Event, Archive, Mediation: Sri Lanka's 1971 Insurrection and the Political Stakes of Fieldwork.
- Author
-
Hewage, Thushara
- Subjects
SRI Lankan politics & government ,INSURGENCY ,ETHNICITY ,POSTCOLONIALISM ,ANTHROPOLOGY ,ETHICS ,CONCEPTUAL history - Abstract
In recent years, much scholarship has revealed how archives and archival artefacts mediate processes of knowledge extraction, production, and representation. Yet, there remains a certain assumption of the archive's transparent availability as a given location for disciplinary work. This essay asks how less visible forms of mediation organize the critical conceptualization and experience of archival inquiry. It examines these conceptual questions through a focus on the 1971 JVP (Janata Vimukti Peramuna—People's Liberation Front) insurgency, a pivotal but now neglected event in Sri Lanka's political history. I explore how an authoritative monograph on the insurrection and its archive have mediated its problematization and enabled its nationalist recuperation. I ascertain the political stakes of returning to the event by locating the supervening context for my own interest in the insurgency, a discursive archive of the disciplinary conceptualization of Sri Lankan political modernity, its characteristic preoccupations, and their effects. I suggest that the event of 1971 offers a locus from which to examine a normative narrative that this archive yields. Recounting how these stakes animated my experience of the liberal archive, the paper's final section asks how different forms of archive implicate distinctive ethical practices and subjects of reading. I pursue this question through the representation and reading of 1971 within what I term the JVP's own pedagogical "archive." I conclude by reviving a postcolonial concern with the critical stakes of disciplinary investigation and suggest a different approach to the problem of "ethnicized" postcolonial modernities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Introduction – Suitcases, Roads, and Archives: Writing the History of Africa after 1960.
- Author
-
White, Luise
- Subjects
AFRICAN history ,HISTORIANS ,ARCHIVES - Abstract
The author presents a personal narrative of writing African history and mentions archives and African historians.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. From Enslavement to Emancipation: Naming Practices in the Danish West Indies.
- Author
-
Abel, Sarah, Tyson, George F., and Palsson, Gisli
- Subjects
SLAVERY ,HISTORY of slavery ,COLONIZATION ,KINSHIP ,GENEALOGY ,POWER (Social sciences) ,SOCIAL networks - Abstract
In most contexts, personal names function as identifiers and as a locus for identity. Therefore, names can be used to trace patterns of kinship, ancestry, and belonging. The social power of naming, however, and its capacity to shape the life course of the person named, becomes most evident when it has the opposite intent: to sever connections and injure. Naming in slave society was primarily practical, an essential first step in commodifying human beings so they could be removed from their roots and social networks, bought, sold, mortgaged, and adjudicated. Such practices have long been integral to processes of colonization and enslavement. This paper discusses the implications of naming practices in the context of slavery, focusing on the names given to enslaved Africans and their descendants through baptism in the Lutheran and Moravian churches in the Danish West Indies. Drawing on historiographical accounts and a detailed analysis of plantation and parish records from the island of St. Croix, we outline and contextualize these patterns and practices of naming. We examine the extent to which the adoption of European and Christian names can be read as an effort toward resistance and self-determination on the part of the enslaved. Our account is illuminated by details from the lives of three former slaves from the Danish West Indies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Résumés / Abstracts.
- Subjects
HISTORIANS ,ARCHIVES - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. In search of James Croll: archives, genealogy, publications and other resources.
- Author
-
EDWARDS, Kevin J.
- Subjects
GENEALOGY ,ARCHIVES - Abstract
Source materials for investigating the life of James Croll are examined and collated. This is organised around the topics of: Croll's Autobiographical sketch and the Memoir of his life and work, both contained within the volume produced by James Campbell Irons; publications by Croll; aspects of his genealogy; manuscript sources in publicly accessible archives and in private ownership; and other published sources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The Visitor's Corner with Trudy Huskamp Peterson.
- Subjects
PUBLIC records ,TRUTH commissions ,ACCESS to archives ,ARCHIVES ,EMISSION standards ,FREEDOM of Information Act (U.S.) ,HUMAN rights organizations - Abstract
Trudy Huskamp Peterson, an archival consultant and certified archivist, discusses the importance of archives in enriching our understanding of the past and transforming lives. She highlights the challenges that archives face, such as underfunding and the misconception that digitization solves all problems. Peterson explores the unique practices of archives in the United States, including the impact of federalism on archival responsibility and the concept of continuous custody. She emphasizes the role of archives in resolving conflicts, asserting rights, and providing a sense of place, family, and history. However, archives can also be influenced by biases and omissions, leading to silences and gaps in the historical record. Access to archives can be restricted due to concerns over misuse, political interference, and national security. Building human rights archives requires careful consideration of acquisition policies and objectives. Many archives remain underused, and the UNHCR archives, in particular, hold valuable records on global conflicts and displacement. Access to archives is essential for understanding and addressing the complexities of the past. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. History by Commission? The Belgian Colonial Past and the Limits of History in the Public Eye.
- Author
-
Mathys, Gillian and Van Beurden, Sarah
- Subjects
HISTORIANS ,PUBLIC history ,HISTORICAL research ,IMPERIALISM ,RESEARCH - Abstract
The article focuses on historians' roles in the Belgian Parliamentary Commission on the Colonial Past, reflecting on the challenges and implications of engaging in public academic work. Topics include the shaping of the report, the limitations imposed by a politicized context, and the complexities of balancing historical research with public and political expectations, particularly in debates about colonialism.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Translating, Summarising and Hidden Attribution: R. H. Lightfoot's Problematic Use of German Scholarship.
- Author
-
Massey, Brandon
- Subjects
ARCHIVES ,SCHOLARS ,LETTERS ,TRAVEL ,PICTURES ,SCHOLARSHIPS - Abstract
The form-critical method found an English-speaking champion in R. H. Lightfoot of Oxford University. Through multiple publications he promoted the ideas of Rudolf Bultmann, Martin Dibelius and Ernst Lohmeyer. However, a close comparison of their texts reveals that Lightfoot sometimes simply translated the words of Dibelius and Lohmeyer, at times without appropriate attribution, and presented their ideas as his own. Recently discovered letters in the Lightfoot archive at Oxford University provide a more complete picture of Lightfoot's travels and interaction with German NT scholars. These discoveries call for a reassessment of Lightfoot's place in the history of NT scholarship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Digitizing artist periodicals: new methodologies from the Digital Humanities for Analysing Artist Networks.
- Author
-
Crombez, Thomas
- Subjects
DIGITIZATION of archival materials ,DIGITAL libraries ,DIGITIZATION ,PERIODICALS ,ARCHIVES ,NEWSPAPER & periodical libraries ,BELGIAN history ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
The research project Digital Archive of Belgian Neo-Avant-garde Periodicals (DABNAP) aims to digitize and analyse a large number of artists' periodicals from the period 1950-1990. The artistic renewal in Belgium since the 1950s, sustained by small groups of artists (such as G58 or De Nevelvlek), led to a first generation of post-war artist periodicals. Such titles proved decisive for the formation of the Belgian neo-avant-garde in literature and the visual arts. During the sixties and the seventies, happening and socially-engaged art took over and gave a new orientation to artist periodicals. In this article, I wish to highlight the challenges and difficulties of this project, for example, in dealing with non-standard formats, types of paper, typography, and non-paper inserts. A fully searchable archive of neo-avant-garde periodicals allows researchers to analyse in much more detail than before how influences from foreign literature and arts took root in the Belgian context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Interpreting Documentary Sources on the Early History of the Congo Free State: The Case of Ngongo Luteta's Rise and Fall.
- Author
-
Gordon, David M.
- Subjects
ARCHIVES ,UNPUBLISHED materials ,ORAL history ,HISTORY of the Congo (Democratic Republic), to 1908 ,AFRICAN history ,METHODOLOGY ,HISTORICAL source material ,RESEARCH - Abstract
Copyright of History in Africa: A Journal of Method is the property of Cambridge University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Hospital for Diseases of the Throat, Ear and Nose (1886–1947): its formation, rise and demise.
- Author
-
Bradley, P J
- Subjects
ACQUISITION of property ,ARCHIVES ,CLINICAL competence ,HEALTH facility administration ,HOSPITAL closures ,HOSPITAL mergers ,HOSPITALS ,HOSPITAL building design & construction ,OUTPATIENT services in hospitals ,MANUSCRIPTS ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL quality control ,OTOLARYNGOLOGY ,OPERATIVE surgery ,TIME ,WAR ,GOVERNMENT regulation - Abstract
Background: The Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Hospital for Diseases of the Throat, Ear and Nose existed in Nottingham for over 60 years, but there is little knowledge or documentation regarding its existence. Methods: The following resources were searched to find out more about the hospital: the Nottinghamshire Archives; Manuscripts and Special Collections at the University of Nottingham Libraries; and Nottingham Central Library. Information was also obtained from the founders' relatives. Results: The hospital was founded in 1886, by Dr Donald Stewart, supported by political and clerical leaders. Initially, it treated out-patients only; in-patients were admitted for surgical treatment from 1905. Suitable accommodation was purchased in 1925, on Goldsmith Street, but required much building extension and alteration. Building restrictions during and following World War II prevented expansion. The National Hospital Survey conducted in 1945 considered the clinical work undertaken to be of a minor character, and recommended closure and amalgamation with the services provided by the Nottingham General Hospital. The hospital closed in 1947. Conclusion: The specialist hospital was deemed unfit and unsuitable to compete with the comprehensive service provided by the Nottingham General Hospital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. THE LATEST LAYARD ARCHIVE: NEW DOCUMENTS FROM NEWCASTLE UNIVERSITY.
- Author
-
Ermidoro, S.
- Subjects
ARCHIVES ,FAMILY archives ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,WEALTH ,NATURE - Abstract
This article provides the first detailed overview of an archive that once belonged to Austen Henry Layard and his family. The collection, deposited in the Special Collections and Archives at Newcastle University, consists of handwritten letters, a dozen books, hundreds of folios, photos, maps, and various other objects: all this material is still unpublished. The archive is particularly interesting due to its nature: it was kept and bequeathed for generations as a family assemblage, and it includes materials that help to better understand several data contained in Layard's publications, his excavations in the ancient Assyrian capitals and his commitment to the dissemination of the knowledge of Assyrian culture. The archive also sheds light on previously unknown private aspects of Layard's wife, Enid Guest, and offers a wealth of information on the cultural legacy left by Layard within his own family, among his descendants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. A celebration of the twentieth anniversary of the Fluvial Archives Group (FLAG).
- Author
-
Briant, Rebecca M., Bridgland, David R., Cordier, Stephane, Rixhon, Gilles, and van Balen, Ronald
- Subjects
ANNIVERSARIES ,CULTURAL landscapes ,ARCHIVES ,FLAGS ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,RESEARCH teams - Abstract
The Fluvial Archives Group (FLAG) was founded in 1996 to bring together researchers looking at the development of fluvial systems over multiple timescales and global spatial scales. Fluvial archives of various types are important not just because they provide insights into past landscape dynamics, e.g., driven by climate or crustal processes, but also because they frequently contain fossil or archaeological material for which they provide stratigraphic control. Since 1996, FLAG has evolved from a research group of the British Quaternary Research Association into an organisation with around 500 members in over 20 countries. The research group held 12 biennial meetings, comprising both presentations and field excursions, as well as multiple themed sessions at international conferences. These had resulted by 2017 in 19 journal special issues, all fully detailed by Cordier et al. (2017). The goals of FLAG are: provision of a community for discussion of key issues concerning fluvial archives, including organising the aforementioned biennial discussion/field meetings, sessions at relevant international conferences, and special issues of journals; continued promotion of the value of fluvial archives by means of readily accessible published information; and coordination of activity with other research groupings with overlapping interests, e.g., by co-convening sessions and collaborating on publications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. ASP volume 30 issue 1 Cover and Back matter.
- Subjects
PHILOSOPHY of science ,ARCHIVES ,ELECTRONIC journals - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Awards of the khudadad sarkar : medals from Tipu Sultan's Mysore.
- Author
-
Rashid, Adnan and Olikara, Nidhin
- Subjects
MEDALS ,MANUSCRIPTS ,ARCHIVES - Abstract
The collection of the Asiatic Society, Calcutta, preserves a manuscript titled Risala-i-Padakah which was formerly in the library of the ruler of Mysore, Tipu Sultan (d. 1799). This manuscript has descriptions of medals with drawings illustrating their forms. We investigate the design of these medals and assert that Tipu Sultan understood the importance of rewarding his loyal subordinates with medals, thus transferring his authority down to them. The 'People's Medals' given to non-combatants, a novel award for those times, are also covered here in detail. We show that some of these medals, reflecting Deccan jewellery traditions, were actually awarded by Tipu Sultan himself to his men, who wore them; and we draw attention to the plunder of these medals, along with other treasures, during the sack of Seringapatam. The authors also view this as a demonstration of Tipu Sultan's regard for loyalty, rank, as well as good governance in opposition to estimates of him by contemporary British biographers. This article is the first documentation of these medals, which were the earliest to be awarded by any state in pre-modern India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. A Hidden Repository of Arabic Manuscripts from Mali: The William A. Brown Collection.
- Author
-
Nobili, Mauro and Bousbina, Said
- Subjects
ARABIC manuscripts ,THEOCRACY ,MANNERS & customs ,RELIGIOUS life - Abstract
The article focuses on the William A. Brown Collection of Arabic manuscripts from Mali, which sheds light on West African Islamic history, specifically history of the Islamic theocracy. Topics include Brown's meticulous collection of oral traditions and Arabic manuscripts during research trips to Mali; the correspondence, writings, and unique manuscripts found in this collection, offering insights into various aspects of religious, political, and social life in the region during that period.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Satellite images as tools of visual diplomacy: NASA's ozone hole visualizations and the Montreal Protocol negotiations.
- Author
-
Grevsmühl, Sebastian V. and Briday, Régis
- Subjects
OZONE layer depletion ,VIENNA Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer (1985). Protocols, etc., 1987 Sept. 15 ,REMOTE-sensing images ,PUBLIC diplomacy ,NEGOTIATION ,VISUALIZATION ,ARCHIVES ,WESTERN countries - Abstract
On 16 September 1987, the main chlorofluorocarbon-producing and -consuming countries signed the Montreal Protocol, despite the absence of a scientific consensus on the mechanisms of ozone depletion over Antarctica. We argue in this article that the rapid diffusion from late 1985 onwards of satellite images showing the Antarctic ozone hole played a significant role in this diplomatic outcome. Whereas negotiators claimed that they chose to deliberately ignore the Antarctic ozone hole during the negotiations since no theory was able yet to explain it, the images still loomed large for many of the actors involved. In Western countries, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) satellite visualizations were diffused through the general press and television stations. Other popular and mass media outlets followed quickly. In describing the circulation and appropriation processes of these images within and beyond the scientific and negotiation arenas, we show that the ozone hole images did play an important part in ozone diplomacy in the two years leading up to the signing of the Montreal Protocol, both in the expert and diplomatic arenas and as public diplomacy tools. We conclude by encouraging scholars to engage with new visual archives and to contribute to the development of the vibrant new field of research on visual diplomacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Displaced Memoryscapes – Archives of Hungarian Women Authors from Post-Yugoslavia.
- Author
-
Roginer, Oszkár
- Subjects
- *
HUNGARIAN literature , *HUNGARIAN women authors , *ARCHIVES , *GEOCRITICISM - Abstract
The article deals with archives of memoryscapes as remembered landscapes of a past society by Hungarian women authors from Yugoslavia. Divided into two separate cycles, it explores how an inhabited geography transgressed from the present into a past, and how it evolved via belletristic practices from the 1990s onward. The archive is therefore assessed as a cumulative development of text-worlds in prose, poetry, and drama by Hungarian women, who either remained in disintegrating Yugoslavia or emigrated to Hungary, both of which led mostly to uprootedness and a misinterpretation of their work. Accordingly, displaced as authors, who remember landscapes that are beyond official memory politics, their archive remained largely unnoticed and marginalised throughout the decades. Emerging in autobiographic writing and literary fiction equally, these memoryscapes are not idiosyncratic but are regulated and systemic representations of a time, a space, and a society. To display such a mnemonic agency, the article integrates the foucauldian notions of the archive with the thirdspace perspective of geocriticism within literary representation, as used in post-colonial thought. Eventually, this enables the exposition of the archive of these female memoryscapes of an ethnic minority not in relation to other "national" archives, or as auxiliary archives of a male perspective, but as a system of thirdspaces and representation in itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Le rôle des archives dans la compréhension de l'éviction d'Alioune Diop du Deuxième Festival Mondial des Arts Négro-Africains (FESTAC 77) et ses conséquences.
- Author
-
Lock, Etienne
- Subjects
ARCHIVES ,ART festivals ,FESTIVALS ,AFRICAN art ,ARCHIVAL research ,EVICTION - Abstract
Résumé: L'éviction d'Alioune Diop du Deuxième Festival Mondial des Arts Négro-Africains (FESTAC), qui constitue l'un des événements les plus importants ayant marqué ce festival, ne se comprend que si l'on en étend le contexte au-delà du Nigéria. Pour cela, il faut aussi élargir le champ d'investigation de la recherche archivistique. C'est dans cette mesure que se révèle l'importance des archives de l'UNESCO et de Présence Africaine, et qu'il apparaît que cette éviction est d'abord un événement indépendant qui a ses propres conséquences sur le plan historique. The eviction of Alioune Diop from the Second World Black and African Festival of Arts and Culture (FESTAC), which constitutes one of the most important events of that festival, can only be understood by going beyond the Nigerian context. Scholars thus need to broaden the scope of their archival research by looking at the archives of UNESCO and Présence Africaine. As a result, the eviction of Alioune Diop and its historical consequences appears as an event independent of FESTAC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Wiriyamu and the Colonial Archive: Reading It Against the Grain? Along the Grain? Read It at All!
- Author
-
Zeman, Andreas
- Subjects
ATROCITIES ,ARCHIVAL resources ,ARCHIVES ,WAR ,MASSACRES ,READING - Abstract
Copyright of History in Africa: A Journal of Method is the property of Cambridge University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Name Recall in the Synoptic Gospels.
- Author
-
van de Weghe, Luuk
- Subjects
CHRISTIAN communities ,ARCHIVES ,WITNESSES ,CONSERVATISM ,PRIMITIVE & early church, ca. 30-600 - Abstract
Onomastic congruence (a feature defined in this article) is characteristic of historiographic biographies from the Early Empire. The Synoptic Gospels display onomastic congruence, as well as conservatism in their treatment of names. The preservation of names, especially those centred around key roles and events, suggests that some names may have been preserved in the oral archives of early Christian communities to footnote living eyewitness sources, paralleling historiographical situations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Cuba, Soviet Oil, and the Sanctions that Never Were: An Archival Investigation of Socialist Relations.
- Author
-
Sanchez-Sibony, Oscar
- Subjects
PETROLEUM ,SOCIALISM ,HISTORIOGRAPHY ,WINTER ,ARCHIVES - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Latin American Studies is the property of Cambridge University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Reconstructing a 'Special Relationship' from Scattered Archives: America, Britain, Europe and the ISCM, 1922–45.
- Author
-
BOWAN, KATE
- Subjects
HISTORY of accounting ,MODERN society ,INTERNATIONAL organization ,ARCHIVES ,EUROCENTRISM ,MUSICAL criticism ,INFORMATION resources management - Abstract
In an account of the early history of the International Society for Contemporary Music (ISCM) for a 1946 BBC broadcast, president of the ISCM Edward Dent recounted the 'two main reasons' why London was proposed as the society's initial headquarters at that first meeting in 1922 in Salzburg. Firstly, he maintained, 'it stood apart from all the quarrels and jealousies of the Continent', and secondly, and most importantly for the purposes of this article, he outlined a triangulated relationship: '[London] was regarded as a link between Europe and America.' 'American music', he continued, 'really needed that link in those days; and the general feeling of the European musicians was that they would provide the music and England the money to pay for it.' But then (again using 'the Continent' and 'Europe' interchangeably) he signalled a profound shift: 'Today the situation has changed. It is Europe now which needs the link with America, for America has become a great music-producing country, while it will take the Continent some little time to recover its creative energy.'
262 Tantalizing though Dent's references to 'links' may be, obtaining clarity on what these transatlantic connections were and how they operated has proved elusive. The telling of an international and transnational history by way of searches of nationally bounded archival collections has raised certain methodological challenges.263 Rising to meet them, however, has uncovered some interesting threads which in turn offer an alternative dimension to a story that is often told from a Eurocentric perspective; one, as already noted by the editors of this round table, which places the Austro-Germanic modernist tradition at its centre.264 Moreover, Dent's framework of a transatlantic musical internationalism that triangulated England, Europe and America as three distinct entities with a set of different and fluid musical relationships and roles has obvious resonances today as Britain, the USA and Europe are once again struggling to rearticulate their positions in respect of each other in a rapidly shifting world order. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The University of Cambridge and the Chantries Act of 1545.
- Author
-
REX, RICHARD
- Subjects
- *
FOLKLORE , *ACADEMIC libraries , *ARCHIVES , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *NATIONAL archives - Abstract
This article calls into question a story that has become part of the folklore and indeed the official history of Cambridge University. Supposedly, the passage of the Chantries Act posed a threat to university colleges which was averted by the lobbying of Cambridge academics early in 1546, and this adroit intervention inspired Henry VIII to found new colleges at Oxford and Cambridge. Close reading of the sources, however, indicates that the universities were singled out for special treatment from the start and that Henry's new foundations were in his mind before the Chantries Act was passed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Left, right, or both? Long-run returns from Bordeaux.
- Author
-
Tolhurst, Tor N.
- Subjects
PORTFOLIO diversification ,SHARPE ratio ,PRICES ,AGE ,PRICE indexes ,ARCHIVES - Abstract
As the market for fine-wine investing matures, basic questions of portfolio strategy remain unexplored. I evaluate how adding fine wine from the superstar châteaux of Bordeaux's Right Bank might complement the traditional focus on the five first-growths of Bordeaux's Left Bank. Fundamentals for the Right Bank's superstars are attractive: they produce roughly an order of magnitude less, face different production conditions, and receive equally impressive critical reviews. However, they receive far less attention than their Left Bank counterparts. To examine returns over the long run, I hand-collected 10,885 prices for eight wines from an archive of 391 Sherry-Lehmann catalogs, a New York City retailer, which began at the end of Prohibition. Using these historical price records, I compare the real returns from investing in the five Premier Cru to a portfolio that adds three superstar châteaux from the Right Bank: Ausone, Cheval Blanc, and Petrus. I find the geometric-average annual return was 6.78% in real terms from 1938 to 2017 for the joint portfolio, less than 0.01% different, but with better risk-reward as measured by the Sharpe ratio. Additionally, I find the life cycle of aging is substantially different across the two Banks, which could provide further diversification benefits for the strategic investor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Looking Forward: Positive and Normative Views of Economic History's Future.
- Author
-
COLLINS, WILLIAM J.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC history ,HISTORIANS ,ARCHIVES ,ELECTRONIC records ,METHODOLOGY - Abstract
The article discusses the future of economic history and its methods, research and possible future trends. Topics include positive and normative questions on the future of economic history, what kind of research projects should economic historians pursue, the faster pace at which knowledge on economic history and its archival information is being converted into digital format.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Collaboration, Survival, and Flight: Fulbe Narratives of Guinea-Bissau's War for Independence, 1961–74.
- Author
-
Glovsky, David N.
- Subjects
GUINEANS (Guinea-Bissauans) ,NARRATIVES ,SOCIAL conditioning ,LIBERTY ,ARCHIVES - Abstract
Throughout the 1960s and early 1970s, Bissau-Guineans fought a bloody war for independence. Typical narratives of the war emphasize the ethnic dimension of the liberation struggle, with Balanta freedom fighters opposing Portuguese-allied Fulbe. This dominant narrative is open to question, as it ignores the war as a 'social condition', and the role that local circumstances played in determining collaboration with the Portuguese, fighting in liberation militaries, or fleeing to neighboring states for personal safety. Oral and archival evidence suggests a more nuanced perspective that blurs the binary nature of this dominant narrative along ethnic fault lines, viewed as either resistance or collaboration. The argument presented in this article allows us to move past defining the war along ethnic or regional lines, and instead urges a view of the conflict as a complex, fractured experience for all Bissau-Guineans, shaped by the particularities of local circumstances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Teaching Queer History in the GAPE Classroom.
- Author
-
Trump, Brian M.
- Abstract
Digitization of archival materials has made it easier not only to analyze queer history during the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, but also to include these sources in the classroom. For instructors interested in incorporating queer history into their classrooms, this piece highlights specific examples of these queer primary sources and what they reveal about the queer past. Focusing specifically on criminal statutes, legal records, newspaper articles, medical discourse, and firsthand accounts, this introduction to queer archival sources emphasizes how these sources can be incorporated into class lectures and discussions, as well as directing attention to where similar examples can be found online in digital archives and databases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Toward Early Modern Archivality: The Perils of History in the Age of Neo-Eurocentrism.
- Author
-
Burak, Guy, Rothman, E. Natalie, and Ferguson, Heather
- Subjects
OTTOMAN Empire ,GEOGRAPHIC boundaries ,ARCHIVES ,EUROCENTRISM ,HAZARDS ,ISLAMIC law - Abstract
This essay addresses the revival of culturalist assumptions in historical archival studies and suggests an alternative framework. Rather than provenance, it privileges textual circulation; rather than civilizational divides between supposedly distinct "European" and "Islamic" archivalities, it highlights mutability and commensurability as defining elements of a broadly shared, if inherently dynamic, internally complex, and transactionally defined early modern archivality. We first show how the historiography on early modern archives has inadvertently perpetuated a myopic Eurocentric view of the centralized archive as a key aspect of European archivality. We analyze how the construct "Islamic archivality," when proffered as a comparative counterpoint to such European archivality, not only promotes an outdated understanding of "Islam" (and, indeed "Europe") as a discrete, transhistorical phenomenon, but rests on a limited set of mostly pre-Ottoman, medieval examples. By positing "Islam" as fundamentally premodern, this historiography sidesteps significant shared late antique genealogies of textual practices and mobilities across a vast early modern region that traverses modern continental/civilizational configurations. In lieu of the prevalent comparative mode, which juxtaposes civilizational blocs and then selectively contrasts specific archival institutions and practices, we suggest concentrating on intersections and circulations of documents and practices across ethnolinguistic, territorial, and juridical boundaries. Drawing on examples from our research in Ottoman diplomatic archives, we challenge scholars of early modern archivality to move beyond fixed notions of "European," and "non-European," "centralized" and "decentralized" archives, and "original" and "copy," as primary indices of comparison, and attend to the social life of documents and their mutability through circulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. West Africa Seen from Moroccan Manuscript Archives.
- Author
-
Nobili, Mauro
- Subjects
HISTORY of libraries ,MANUSCRIPTS ,AFRICAN history ,AFRICANA studies ,AREA studies ,ARCHIVES ,CONTINENTS - Abstract
Copyright of History in Africa: A Journal of Method is the property of Cambridge University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Rethinking Archives, Rewriting History: Other-Archives and the Interdisciplinary Approaches to Moroccan History of the "Years of Lead".
- Author
-
El Guabli, Brahim
- Subjects
HISTORY of archives ,INSCRIPTIONS ,TRUTH commissions ,ARCHIVES ,POLITICAL science ,OPEN spaces ,SUBALTERN - Abstract
Copyright of History in Africa: A Journal of Method is the property of Cambridge University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Zimbabwe's Economic Decline, Archives Access Regimes, Professionalism, and Their Impact on Researcher-Archivist Relations at the National Archives of Zimbabwe.
- Author
-
Bishi, George and Muchefa, Livingstone
- Subjects
ACCESS to archives ,NATIONAL archives ,ARCHIVES ,PROFESSIONAL employees ,ARCHIVISTS ,CIVIL service - Abstract
Copyright of History in Africa: A Journal of Method is the property of Cambridge University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Financial Developments in London in the Seventeenth Century: The Financial Revolution Revisited.
- Author
-
Sussman, Nathan
- Subjects
SEVENTEENTH century ,INTEREST rates ,ARCHIVES ,CORPORATE ratings ,SECONDARY markets ,WAGES - Abstract
A novel series of interest rates paid by the Corporation of London shows that interest rates in London declined by 350 basis points during the seventeenth century. The decline followed a similar pattern in Europe. Records from the Corporation's archive provide evidence for financial development: an increase in the number and volume of debt instruments, an increase in the number of lenders, and the development of a secondary market. Econometric analysis establishes that increasing the debt instruments' liquidity contributed to the convergence of interest rates between London and Amsterdam. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Excavating the Archive / Archiving the Excavation: Archival Processes and Contexts in Archaeology.
- Author
-
Ward, Chloë
- Abstract
This article focuses on the production of archaeological knowledge within the fieldwork archive. Archaeological archives do not always reflect the reality of evidence uncovered during fieldwork processes or even the fieldwork processes themselves. This includes the many different agents and agencies, which are crucial to the construction of archaeological knowledge and their representation—or lack of representation—in the archive. Archaeological archives impose restrictions on how knowledge is included in a collection, the way it is recorded, and the fieldwork processes used. Therefore, this article considers the way in which the processes of archival documentation produce, transform, and construct archaeological knowledge. The main examples are from the British School of Archaeology in Egypt's excavations at Abydos between 1921 and 1922, often referred to as the Tombs of the Courtiers and directed by Flinders Petrie. Looking at the different contexts of an excavation archive, from before its creation to its ongoing curation and use, can reveal significant aspects not just of the history of archaeology but also on many of the ongoing recording methods and processes still used in the field today. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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