767 results
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2. PAPER TRAIL: The Esther McCoy Papers.
- Subjects
ARCHIVAL resources ,ART collecting ,ARCHITECTURAL historians ,PHOTOGRAPHS - Abstract
The article presents the archives collected by architectural historian Esther McCoy in the U.S. The papers contain a wide range of documents including research files, drafts, finished texts and working notes, photographs and slides. It also features the pictures of illuminated structures and designs developed by architect-engineer-contractor Felix Candela and architect Juan O'Gorman which is the snail-form tower of the entrance of house in Mexico. She donated her accumulated archives at the Archives of American Art.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Papierene Ökonomien: Schreiberinnen und ihre Ressourcen um 1800.
- Author
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Zweynert, Charlotte
- Subjects
ACQUISITION of data ,BUSINESSWOMEN ,GEOMETRIC shapes ,KALEIDOSCOPES ,ARCHIVAL materials ,WOMEN'S writings ,ARCHIVAL resources ,ECONOMIC indicators ,COMMUNICATION ,FAMILY-work relationship ,SOCIAL indicators - Abstract
This article focuses on the professional writing of women in the transformation phase around 1800. Referring specifically to the woman of letters Helmina von Chézy (1783-1856) and her family, which participated in the literary market over four generations, it asks how authors could use paper(s) as assets or resources. It is shown that writersʼ papers were collected and kept as material evidence of life, that they could be an indicator of financial status and provide insight into financial practices, and that they were used particularly to position oneself (as a writer) and to relate to others. Within changing personal and historical contexts, the writing work of family members was based ultimately, in varying forms and shapes, on the logics of their social relations, lived as well as negotiated and recorded on paper. Thus, the papers used and inscribed in the family can be conceptualized as a multi-perspective kaleidoscope, offering new views on central aspects and mechanisms of writerly economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Medium Rare: Exploring Archives and Their Conversion from Original to Digital Part Two-- The Holistic Knowledge Arsenal of Paper-based Archives.
- Author
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Latham, Kiersten F.
- Subjects
DIGITIZATION of archival materials ,ARCHIVES ,ARCHIVAL resources ,ARCHIVAL processing ,KNOWLEDGE transfer ,DIGITAL technology ,ACCESS to knowledge movement - Abstract
This paper is the second installment in a two-part series on the physicality of archival material in the context of the digital age. The first part reviewed key lessons in the history of new technologies that have affected archival practice. Part two will explore a holistic understanding of paper-based knowledge transmission in the context of the digital access movement. The intent is to provide a more expansive context to the shift from a physically, place-based activity to one of ubiquitous access to secondary materials. The investigation emphasizes two notions: archives as thing and archives as experience. Issues of authenticity, evidence, and sensory engagement are seen as potential knowledge elements of original material. Furthermore, physical archives are considered in their environmental context, through physical processes in the embodied act of using, and through their meaning to the user. The purpose of this article is to highlight the tacit, assumed and taken-for-granted aspects of using original archival material to better understand the conversion from physical to digital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Paper Trails: The Brooklyn College Institute for Training Peer Writing Tutors and the Composition Archive.
- Author
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Trimbur, John
- Subjects
ARCHIVES ,ARCHIVES collection management ,ARCHIVAL resources ,ARCHIVES & education ,COLLEGE publications ,COMPOSITION (Language arts) ,RHETORIC ,WRITING processes - Abstract
The author discusses the influence of archival sources in the development of rhetoric and composition writing. He states that charting the history of this method of writing was the cause of its existence. Some of these archival sources are journals and books, unpublished dissertations, old syllabi, textbooks, university and college catalogs, as well as lecture notes, writing assignments, and student papers. The author says that the archives of Kenneth A. Bruffee, "Brooklyn College Institute for Training Peer Writing Tutors," gives importance to the role of professional gatherings, which includes seminars, conferences, colloquia, workshops, and summer institutes, in the formation of composition studies.
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- 2008
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6. Lord Davies of Llandinam Papers.
- Author
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Jones, J. Graham
- Subjects
ARCHIVAL resources ,CATALOGING of archival materials ,LIBRARY materials ,MANUSCRIPTS - Abstract
The article discusses the large archive of the papers of David Davies or Lord Davies of Llandinam (1880-1944) which was deposited at the National Library of Wales in 1970 and 1992 with a small group of further papers was added to the collection in July 2012. It states that it is the largest personal archive in the custody of the National Library wherein cataloguing was undertaken by several different archivists that was finally completed in 2017.
- Published
- 2019
7. PARLIAMENTARY PAPERS OF TASMANIA, 1856-1900, WESTERN AUSTRALIA, 1890-1900, As a Source of Labour History.
- Author
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FRY, E. C.
- Subjects
ARCHIVAL resources ,HISTORY of labor - Abstract
The article presents a list of archival resources related to labor history available in the parliamentary papers of the then-colonies of Tasmania and Western Australia from the second half of the 19th century, organized into topical sections such as immigration, convict labor, railways, and public works.
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
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8. A Premier, a Tin Box, and a Landlady: Ellen Cooke and the Norquay papers.
- Author
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Friesen, Gerald
- Subjects
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WOMEN scholars , *HISTORICAL source material , *ARCHIVAL resources , *NINETEENTH century , *HISTORY ,19TH century Canadian history - Abstract
The article offers information on the Canadian scholar Ellen Gillies Cooke and her contributions to Manitoba and Canada's historical record. Topics include her gift of thousands of documents to the Archives of Manitoba which include office records of Manitoba premier John Norquay and a significant amount of her personal research on the Norquays, the mystery of the office documents being in typed form when the premier's office did not have a typewriter, and its implications in archival practice.
- Published
- 2015
9. A matter of perspective: Ann Walker through her lens and those of her contemporaries.
- Author
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Oliveira, Marlene
- Subjects
ARCHIVAL resources ,WOMEN'S history - Abstract
When the vibrant dramatization of Anne Lister stormed screens across the globe in Gentleman Jack, she sparked interest in both the real Lister and the women in her life. Among them is her partner, Ann Walker, who was a constant presence in Lister's later life. Given that archival sources connected to Walker are fairly limited in volume and scope, studying her is challenging and requires a combination of different resources, among them Walker's letters and journal. These allow for a better understanding of Ann Walker but are not comprehensive enough to cover most of her life. Thus, to obtain a broader perspective of Walker, it is necessary to consult documents that belonged to her contemporaries. What can one learn about Walker from her perspective? How can Walker's contemporaries fill in the gaps that aren't covered by her papers? And how will these perspectives affect interpretations of Walker? In this article, I provide an overview of the materials that can be used to study and understand the real Ann Walker, both from her perspective and that of others. This article also provides suggestions on keeping a neutral approach to interpreting Walker while using different resources as sources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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10. The Francis Louis Miksa papers at the archives of American mathematics.
- Author
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Burchsted, Frederic F.
- Subjects
- *
RECREATIONAL mathematics , *ARCHIVAL resources - Abstract
Reports on the acquisition of the papers of Francis L. Miksa by the Archives of American Mathematics. Problem solving, magic squares, Pythagorean triangles, and others; Background on Mr. Miksa and his work in recreational mathematics; Content of the papers; Background on the Archives of American Mathematics.
- Published
- 1993
11. Protective Packaging: an introduction to the materials used to produce archival quality boxes, folders, sleeves and envelopes.
- Author
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Lindsay, Helen
- Subjects
ARCHIVES ,ARCHIVAL resources - Abstract
Provides an overview on materials used to produce archival quality boxes, folders, sleeves and envelopes. Quality of machine-made papers; Different types of pulp; Manufacturing process of machine-made papers; Similarity in the basic processes for producing paper and board; Buffer and the pH value, the measure of the acidity or alkalinity of any material; Fabric; Adhesives.
- Published
- 2000
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12. ARTISTS' PAPERS REGISTER.
- Author
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Hopkinson, Martin
- Subjects
DATABASES ,ARCHIVAL resources ,ARTISTS ,ENGRAVERS ,WOOD-engravers ,LITHOGRAPHERS ,PILOT projects ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
The article provides information on Artists' Papers Register, a finding list of archival documents that is related to artists, engravers, wood-engravers and lithographers. The author reveals that in 1987, the Artists' Papers Register has begun with a pilot project at Glasgow University Library and funded by the Getty Grant Program. The Artist' Papers Register is devoted to investigate the holdings of artists' documents that are stored in west of Scotland institutions. The database of the Register can be searched by the names of artists and by several categories. Moreover, it further points out that it is planned that the said Register should be regularly updated so that there will be opportunities to extend its usefulness.
- Published
- 2005
13. Archives in formation: Privileged spaces, popular archives and paper trails.
- Author
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Lynch, Michael
- Subjects
- *
ARCHIVES , *ARCHIVAL resources , *INFORMATION retrieval , *DOCUMENTATION - Abstract
Discusses the archives' role as sources of documentary information and as sites of historical struggle over the writing, collecting, consignment, destruction and interpretation of writings. Jacques Derrida's etymology of the word archive; Scholarly archives as personal monuments; Conflict in gathering records for official investigations of government scandals; Popular archive from the O.J. Simpson.
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- 1999
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14. Lost memory: The paper drives of World War II.
- Author
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Smith, Bruce
- Subjects
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WORLD War II , *WASTE products , *ARCHIVAL resources , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Examines the wholesale destruction of priceless and irreplaceable historical records in Australia during World War II. Impact of Australia's involvement in the war on the policy on waste materials; Features of the plan for the salvage of waste materials; Results of salvage collection in the country; Four types of salvage activities; Historical records destroyed during the campaign.
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- 1998
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15. Enchanting things: the scientific communication of Julius Sumner Miller.
- Author
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Harmes, Marcus
- Subjects
PHILOSOPHY of science ,SCIENTIFIC communication ,TELEVISION personalities ,ARCHIVAL resources ,POLICY sciences ,SCIENCE education - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to study the popular educational broadcasting of Julius Sumner Miller and its intersections with contemporary science policy and education. Design/methodology/approach: The paper draws on archival research including resources so far unused by historians of science or of broadcasting and audio-visual resources of Sumner Miller's broadcasts on Australian, Canadian and American television. It begins by contextualising Sumner Miller as both an academic and broadcaster. The second section interprets the core points of his educational philosophy which he articulated in his written and broadcast works. The final section uses his private papers contextualised by works on the history and philosophy of science to interpret and delineate the disparity between Sumner Miller's influence as a populariser of science and the prevailing trends in scientific policy and teaching. Findings: This paper proposes that reconstructing the themes and recurring points he asserted in his broadcasts reveals disjunction between Sumner Miller's high-profile successes and the contemporary trends in both science policy and science education. This paper interprets the circumstance of an internationally known and influential science populariser who was coterminous with but against the grain of the notion of "big science". He therefore sought to popularise science precisely as it was developing in ways he disparaged. Research limitations/implications: This paper breaks new ground by interpreting the different sources, audio-visual and written, created by and about an influential television broadcaster. Originality/value: Although he was widely and internationally known, and the range of his influence on science communication is generally noted, Sumner Miller's broadcasting and the themes and educational philosophy espoused in it is little researched and contextualised. This paper sharpens understanding of his influence but also his points of intersection and disjunction with scientific culture. Hitherto unused archival resources contribute to this understanding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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16. Making Sense of Student Source Selection: Using the WHY Method to Analyze Authority in Student Research Bibliographies.
- Author
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Lambert, Frank, Thill, Mary, and Rosenzweig, James W.
- Subjects
STUDENT research ,BIBLIOGRAPHY ,INFORMATION resources ,INFORMATION sharing ,ARCHIVAL resources - Abstract
In a follow-up to a pilot study published in 2019, the authors collected student research papers from English Composition II courses at three public comprehensive universities from different regions in the United States to classify and compare the sources selected by students at each institution. Working with a representative sample of 712 bibliographic references, the authors used a research-tested taxonomy called The WHY Method to classify each source by three key attributes--Who wrote each source, How it was edited, and whY it was published. The results of this cross-institutional study indicate that student source selection is affected most powerfully by the variables of which institution a student attends, student age, and whether the student is a first-generation university student. Student GPA, gender, class ranking (freshman, sophomore, and so on), and ethnicity were not statistically predictive factors. This study establishes the importance of institutional context in how students construct authority and provides librarians with a tool that enables them to better understand and describe that context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Exploring Tensions between Conservationists and African Subsistence Farmers in the Dukuduku Forest Area KwaZulu Natal, in the 1980s and 1990s.
- Author
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Nyathi, Patrick A.
- Subjects
BIOTIC communities ,CONSERVATIONISTS ,FOOD security ,ARCHIVAL resources ,WELL-being ,ENVIRONMENTALISM ,FOOD preferences - Abstract
All over the world, individuals rely on forests for food security, nutrition, and the sustenance of their livelihoods. Forests serve as a source of personal and economic consumption, where harvested products are used directly or sold for profit. Consequently, forests play a crucial role in ensuring food security and supporting the livelihoods of people worldwide. In South Africa, natural forests and woodlands hold particular significance for the well-being of rural communities. These ecosystems provide a variety of socio-economic and ecological benefits to communities residing within or near such forested areas. The Dukuduku forest is an integral part of a sensitive ecosystem at both national and continental levels. It is intricately connected to the iSimangaliso Wetland Park, contributing to the economic development and natural diversity of South Africa. Thus, discussing one area without considering the other is impossible. This paper relies on a combination of archival sources, including newspapers, research reports, and various written and oral accounts gathered from interviews with land claimants, community leaders, traditional leaders, local farmers, and residents of the area. The central argument posited is that the primary source of conflict in the Dukuduku forest arises from the state's efforts to displace forest residents whose livelihoods have historically depended on the forest. The paper aims to illustrate that the racialization of the destruction of this indigenous forest has not served the interests of either the state or environmentalists. Forest residents have employed diverse strategies to resist evictions, resulting in the substantial destruction of the forest and at least sixty percent of the flood plain along the uMfolozi River. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
18. Archiving the history of economics.
- Author
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Weintraub, E. Roy, Meardon, Stephen J., Gayer, Ted, and Banzhaf, H. Spencer
- Subjects
ARCHIVES ,ECONOMICS ,HISTORY of economics ,ECONOMISTS ,LIBRARY storage centers ,ARCHIVAL resources ,RECORDS ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,AUXILIARY sciences of history - Abstract
Unlike scholars in many other disciplines, economists show little organized concern for preserving disciplinary archives. Consider the contrast between the community of mathematicians and the community of economists: the American Mathematical Society and the Mathematical Association of America have embarked on a joint project to preserve official archives and to advise individuals and groups about the preservation of personal and organization-related papers: these two large organizations have recognized that mathematicians' "personal papers and the records of mathematical institutions and organizations are a source for an understanding of history." Generally, donors are asked to sign an agreement that gives property of the papers to the repository; rarely do repositories accept collections on loan or deposit. Before signing such an agreement, one should become familiar with the repository's policies on availability and publication of the papers. Most repositories are willing to attempt to address any concerns one may have, such as a desire to restrict part of the collection to protect the privacy of others.
- Published
- 1998
19. Hidden Figures: A New History of the Permanent Income Hypothesis.
- Author
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Burns, Jennifer
- Subjects
CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,ARCHIVAL resources ,HYPOTHESIS ,TWENTIETH century ,ALCOHOL drinking ,MATILDA effect - Abstract
This article uses archival sources to reconstruct an alternate history of Milton Friedman's A Theory of the Consumption Function, spotlighting the contributions of his collaborators Margaret Reid, Dorothy Brady, and Rose Friedman. Although Milton Friedman offered public credit to his wife and their two close friends, none received formal recognition or reward for their contribution to the permanent income hypothesis. The article documents this hypothesis as an example in professional economics of the well-known "Matilda effect," in which women's intellectual contributions are systemically devalued, while arguing it is important to distinguish between formal and informal credit. Further, the article connects the lower status of women's consumption economics to broader shifts in the economics discipline across the twentieth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The rediscovered Islamic manuscripts of the Cospi Museum in the University Library of Bologna.
- Author
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Gigante, Federica
- Subjects
MANUSCRIPTS ,MANUSCRIPT collections ,MUSEUMS ,ARCHIVAL resources ,ACADEMIC libraries - Abstract
This article reconstructs, by means of unpublished and newly discovered archival sources, the path of the Islamic manuscripts of the Cospi Museum from their entry into the collection of Ferdinando Cospi up to the present day, and identifies them, for the first time, in a group of manuscripts currently held in the University Library of Bologna. Although Islamic manuscripts had made their way to Italy since medieval times and numerous examples may be found in Italian libraries today, very few represent the collection of a single individual and, among these, fewer still have survived as a coherent group. The rediscovered collection of Islamic manuscripts of the Cospi Museum therefore represents a rare survival which provides new insights into early modern collecting practices in Italy, as well as new material through which to explore the history of the interaction between the Islamic world and Italy in the early modern period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Rethinking Historical Methods in Organization Studies: Organizational Source Criticism.
- Author
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Heller, Michael
- Subjects
HISTORY associations ,ARCHIVAL resources ,HISTORICAL source material ,CRITICISM ,ORGANIZATIONAL research - Abstract
How do we know what we know about an organization's history? What methodologies do historians use? I explain and adapt the historical method of source criticism for organizational scholars through the new technique of organizational source criticism. Source criticism is how historians do research in archives. The role of source criticism is to identify, analyse and use bias in historical sources to write reliable historical narratives. Organization source criticism emphasizes the plurality of organizational sources. I capture this plurality through the organizational source criticism matrix, which categorizes organizational archival sources into four types based on their category and modality. Category differentiates between narrative and documentary sources, and modality distinguishes reportative from performative sources. The matrix proposes four distinct forms of source criticism for each type of organizational source and exemplifies these through two academic articles from management and organizational history. The paper encourages researchers to adopt organizational source criticism to create robust organizational historical narratives. It also emphasizes the importance of context, triangulation and colligation in organizational historical research. Organizational source criticism is a new historical methodology adapted to researching sources in organizational archives that aims at establishing the veracity and meaning of organizational archival sources. It will benefit organizational scholars who intend to conduct historical organizational archival research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Tracing the rise of video halls and transient media forms in Bengal: an archaeology of the non-archived.
- Author
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Ghosh, Dattatreya
- Subjects
ARCHIVAL materials ,MOTION picture industry ,ETHNOGRAPHIC analysis ,ARCHIVAL resources ,MASS media - Abstract
The lack of archival materials and objects appears as a primary challenge in conducting research on the history of media and communications in India, specifically while writing a comprehensive historical account of Bengali cinema. This paper will try to look at video halls and video tapes as the transient media spaces and objects. In the case of West Bengal, video tapes and video halls are an important part of media history about which little has been written or researched. This paper will try to look into the process of writing media history of scarcely archived media forms following the method of media archaeology and question how the method becomes important in cases of absence of archival materials. This paper will also try to enquire how media ethnography unfolds a different narrative of media history which is otherwise absent in the material archives or institutional records. Using the theoretical framework of the study of archives, this paper tries to explore new archives which present a different history of intermedia transactions in the history of Bengali cinema. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. AN INTERDISCIPLINARY SPATIAL HUMANITIES APPROACH TO STUDY THE TRANSFORMATIONS OF THE SOUTH FAÇADE OF THE SALA DEI CINQUECENTO OF PALAZZO VECCHIO IN FLORENCE.
- Author
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Corazzini, S., Conti, A., Fiorini, L., Pagliaricci, G., Kwakkelstein, M. W., and Tucci, G.
- Subjects
ARCHITECTURAL details ,ARCHITECTURAL history ,FACADES ,ARCHIVAL resources ,GEOMATICS ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Digital and spatial techniques, such as reality-based surveying and 3D modelling, have long been used in archaeology. However, in recent years the use of these techniques has gained importance also in the history of architecture, a discipline in which these data can help to interpret traditionally used, but often incomplete, written sources (Tucci et al. 2021; Fiorini et al. 2023).This paper is about an aspect of the eighteenth-century renovations of Palazzo Vecchio. It focuses attention on a small terrace that runs alongside the exterior facade of the Sala dei Cinquecento and to which there is no entrance. The question this paper seeks to answer is: why during eighteenth-century renovations it was decided to exclude the existing entrance to the terrace from the accessible spaces? Using geomatics techniques, it has been possible to identify the location of the enclosed spaces in relation to other parts of the building (Tucci, 2017).In accordance with the criteria of Spatial Humanities, the present research is characterized by an interdisciplinary approach based on the analysis and interpretation of data obtained from archival sources (Archivio Storico Comunale di Firenze, Fototeca Comunale di Firenze, Archivio Centrale di Stato di Roma, Archivio di Stato di Firenze, Gabinetto fotografico degli Uffizi, Catalogo Generale Beni Culturali, Biblioteca Nazionale), the consultation of relevant published iconographic sources in libraries, and the interpretation of 3D data and architectural elements discovered during the onsite survey of the area between the inner and outer southern façades of the Sala dei Cinquecento.The first part of this essay focus on the southern façade of the Sala dei Cinquecento and aims to demonstrate to what extent the Carlo Falconieri's modification altered the general appearance of the façade. The second part, aims to clarify the architectural phases or aspects of the southern façade of the Sala dei Cinquecento before Falconieri's works. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Nano-Level Additive Manufacturing: Condensed Review of Processes, Materials, and Industrial Applications.
- Author
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Fidan, Ismail, Alshaikh Ali, Mohammad, Naikwadi, Vivekanand, Gudavasov, Shamil, Mahmudov, Mushfig, Mohammadizadeh, Mahdi, Zhang, Zhicheng, and Sharma, Ankit
- Subjects
TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,THREE-dimensional printing ,MATERIALS science ,RESEARCH personnel ,ARCHIVAL resources - Abstract
Additive manufacturing, commonly known as 3D printing, represents the forefront of modern manufacturing technology. Its growing popularity spans across research and development, material science, design, processes, and everyday applications. This review paper presents a crucial review of nano-level 3D printing, examining it from the perspectives of processes, materials, industrial applications, and future trends. The authors have synthesized the latest insights from a wide range of archival articles and source books, highlighting the key findings. The primary contribution of this study is a condensed review report that consolidates the newest research on nano-level 3D printing, offering a broad overview of this innovative technology for researchers, inventors, educators, and technologists. It is anticipated that this review study will significantly advance research in nanotechnology, additive manufacturing, and related technological fields. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Somewhere downstairs: Re-animating a departmental geography collection.
- Author
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Matless, David
- Subjects
- *
ARCHIVES , *MAP collections , *ARCHIVAL resources , *ARCHIVAL materials , *GEOGRAPHY , *ACADEMIC departments - Abstract
This paper discusses the re-animation of a geography departmental collection through a study of the archives and map collection of the School of Geography, University of Nottingham. The discussion is situated within parallel examples of work on geographical archives and map collections, and wider debates on engagement with archival sources. The paper considers how a previously dormant collection has been re-animated in recent years, conveys the range of source material involved, and discusses the possibilities of digitisation. The paper thereby raises questions which could be asked of the holdings of any academic department, from whatever time period. • The first detailed study of the re-animation of a geography departmental archival and map collection. • Shows a variety of original source material including photographic slides, plans, maps and posters. • Connects the study of a specific archive and map collection to wider debates on engagement with archival sources. • Examines the possibilities and implications of digitising analogue archival material. • Raises questions which could be asked of any archives and collections held by academic departments, from whatever period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Local circumstances matter: the story of two peasant resistances in northwestern Ethiopia from 1974 to 1991.
- Author
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Fikremaryam, Dejenie
- Subjects
PEASANTS ,ARCHIVAL resources ,MILITARY government - Abstract
This paper aims to examine the strategies employed by the peasantry to defend their established rights and privileges against a dominant state. A careful analysis of archival and oral sources revealed that despite having common grievances, the peasants in northwestern Ethiopia have adopted a distinct approach to resistance that aligns with their local circumstances. Thus, this paper argues that local factors play a crucial role in determining the nature, content, and duration of resistance movements. Besides, it provides an opportunity to examine the central role played by the peasantry in shaping the course of history. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Archives in a changing climate: responding to a diversity of environments.
- Author
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Foscarini, Fiorella and Frings-Hessami, Viviane
- Subjects
ARCHIVES ,CLIMATE change ,ARCHIVAL resources ,RACISM in language ,HISTORY of archives ,EMAIL hacking ,EMAIL management - Abstract
This issue is the second of two special issues of I Archival Science i dedicated to papers from the Eighth International Conference on the History of Records and Archives (I-CHORA 8), which was held at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, on 28-30 May 2018. In the last I-CHORA paper of this special issue, Lowry develops his opening keynote address, enriched by discussions with conference participants, into a research agenda for displaced archives. 3 Craig BL, Eppard PB, MacNeil H. Exploring perspectives and themes for histories of records and archives: the first international conference on the history of records and archives (I-CHORA). [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. THE GENESIS OF KOPER MEDIEVAL STATUTES (1238-1423).
- Author
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DAROVEC, Darko
- Subjects
INSURGENCY ,STATUTES ,OFFICES ,METROPOLIS ,ARCHIVAL resources ,CITY councils - Abstract
Copyright of Acta Histriae is the property of Historical Society of Southern Primorska of Koper 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
29. Major accessions to repositories in 2004 relating to legal history.
- Subjects
MANUSCRIPTS ,LEGAL history ,ARCHIVAL materials ,ARCHIVAL resources - Abstract
The article presents a list of manuscript accessions relating to legal history which were received by over 200 record repositories throughout the British Isles in 2004. The information is used to produce a number of thematic digests which are distributed for publication or added to the indexes of the National Register of Archives.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Major accessions to repositories in 2003 relating to legal history.
- Subjects
ARCHIVES ,HISTORY ,AUXILIARY sciences of history ,ARCHIVAL research ,ARCHIVAL resources ,DOCUMENTATION - Abstract
Presents list of major accessions to repositories in 2003 relating to legal history.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Sperm-Force: Naturphilosophie and George Newport's Quest to Discover the Secret of Fertilization.
- Author
-
Coggon, Jennifer
- Subjects
NATURAL theology ,GAMETES ,ARCHIVAL resources ,MIND & body ,EMBRYOLOGY - Abstract
This paper analyses the forgotten concept of "sperm-force" proposed by George Newport (1803–1854). Newport is known for his comprehensive microscopic examinations of sperm and egg interaction in amphibian fertilization between 1850 and 1854. My work with archival sources reveals that Newport believed fertilization was caused by sperm-force, which the Royal Society refused to publish. My reconstruction chronologically traces the philosophical and experimental origins of sperm-force to Newport's 1830s entomological work. Sperm-force is a remnant of Newport's speculations on the creation of the active individual. I argue that sperm-force was rooted in British interpretations of German Naturphilosophie, which demonstrates Continental influences on mid-Victorian embryology, particularly the role of male generative power. This context provides further evidence that British versions of Romantic science fostered sophisticated experimental work. The refusal by Paleyite stalwarts of natural theology to publish Newport's ideas illustrates the institutional resistance to German pantheistic and vitalistic influences. This reconstruction of sperm-force's philosophical foundation and its reception offers new understandings of mid-Victorian attitudes toward the inheritance of mind and body. It situates Newport's work within the nineteenth century's scientific project to assign stereotypical genders to the gametes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The practice of historical ecology: What, when, where, how and what for.
- Author
-
Santana-Cordero, Aarón Moisés, Szabó, Péter, Bürgi, Matthias, and Armstrong, Chelsey Geralda
- Subjects
- *
SCIENTIFIC method , *ARCHIVAL resources , *HUMAN ecology , *HUMANITY - Abstract
In recent decades, there has been a growing number of studies exploring the historical dimensions of the interconnectedness of human societies and the environment. A core approach in this field is historical ecology. We analyzed 544 historical-ecological papers to assess patterns and trends in the field. We found a high degree of interdisciplinarity with a focus on local case studies, of periods of fewer than 500 years, analyzing archival sources through quantitative approaches. The proportion of papers containing management recommendations has increased over time. To make historical ecology globally relevant, more effort should be made to utilize studies across languages, borders and worldviews. We call for high standards regarding the use of social scientific methodologies. Lastly, we argue that fostering longer-term studies and assessing the real-life impact of policy recommendations emerging from historical ecology can help the discipline better contribute solutions to the challenges facing humanity in an uncertain future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Leveraging the hard and soft elements of TQM: the interplay of benchmarking and improvement processes.
- Author
-
Filippi, Emilia, Gaio, Loris, and Zamarian, Marco
- Subjects
TOTAL quality management ,BENCHMARKING (Management) ,PERFORMANCE standards ,ARCHIVAL resources - Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to analyze how the interplay between hard and soft elements of total quality management (TQM) produces the conditions for sustaining success in the quest for quality. Design/methodology/approach: A qualitative analysis (Gioia method) was carried out on an original dataset collected through both direct and indirect methods (i.e. archival sources, interviews and observations) to generate a new interpretive framework. Findings: The interpretative framework identifies four categories of elements: trigger elements create the starting conditions for a quality virtuous cycle; benchmarking tools set the standards of performance; improvement tools enable exploration of the space of possible alternative practices and finally, catalytic forces allow the institutionalization of effective techniques discovered in this search process into new standards. Research limitations/implications: The findings the authors present in this paper are derived by a single case study, limiting the generalizability of our results in other settings. Practical implications: This study has three implications: first, the design of trigger elements is critical for the success of any TQM initiative; second, the interplay of improvement and benchmarking tools at several levels should be coherent and third, to exploit the potential of TQM, efforts should be devoted to the dissemination of new effective practices by means of catalyzing elements. Originality/value: The model provides a more specific understanding of the nature and purpose of the hard and soft elements of TQM and the dynamic interaction between the two classes of elements over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Emancipatory archival methods: Exploring the historical geographies of disability.
- Author
-
Crawford, Laura
- Subjects
- *
HISTORICAL geography , *ARCHIVAL resources , *ETHICAL problems , *ARCHIVAL research , *RESEARCH ethics - Abstract
This paper focuses on the use of emancipatory research principles in archival research and contends with the suitability of academic conventions that characterise ethical practice when the research goal is to elevate the voices of marginalised historical groups. Drawing on a case study of Le Court Cheshire Home, England (1948–1975) to address a critical gap in the literature, I highlight some ethical dilemmas I encountered when working at the nexus of historical geography and geographies of disability. This paper demonstrates what an emancipatory research approach means for an archival study of disability, using examples to illustrate how ethical decisions impacted all stages of the research design and the write‐up of findings. I argue that ethics should not be envisaged solely as an approval process completed at the project's outset. Rather, the explorative nature of archival research necessitates that ethics should be an iterative undertaking, with archival sources having the potential to shape both the content and conduct of the research. The paper uses a case study of Le Court Cheshire Home to explore research ethics and the applicability of emancipatory research principles for an archival study of disability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Jane Addams and the Swarthmore College Peace Collection.
- Author
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Addison, Barbara E. and Yoder, Anne M.
- Subjects
ARCHIVAL resources ,HISTORICAL source material ,WOMEN & peace - Abstract
The article presents an overview of how the Swarthmore College Peace Collection: A Memorial to Jane Addams was developed. Significant material acquired from her nephew James Weber Linn's collection of papers, from Hull-House, and from the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom is mentioned. The Swarthmore College Peace Collection's website has correspondence from famous people such as Edward Bok, Carrie Chapman Catt, Herbert Hoover, Theodore Roosevelt, Beatrice Potter Webb, and Woodrow Wilson.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. A Distracted Scientist: The Life and Contributions of John Senders.
- Author
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Hancock, P. A., Crichton-Harris, Ann, Sellen, Abigail, Sheridan, Thomas B., and Hancock, Gabriella M.
- Subjects
ARCHIVAL resources ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,COOPERATIVE research - Abstract
Objective: To provide an evaluative and personal overview of the life and contributions of Professor John Senders and to introduce this Special Issue dedicated to his memory. Background: John Senders made many profound contributions to HF/E. These various topics are exemplified by the range of papers which compose the Special Issue. Collectively, these works document and demonstrate the impact of his many valuable research works. Method: The Special Issue serves to summarize Senders' collective body of work as can be extracted from archival sources. This introductory paper recounts a series of remembrances derived from personal relationships, as well as the products of cooperative investigative research. Results: This collective evaluative process documents Senders' evident and deserved status in the highest pantheon of HF/E pioneers. It records his extraordinary life, replete with accounts of his insights and joie de vivre in exploring and explaining the world which surrounded him. Applications: Senders' record of critical contributions provides the example, par excellence, of the successful and fulfilling life in science. It encourages all, both researchers and practitioners alike, in their own individual search for excellence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The academic sabbatical as a symbol of change in higher education: from rest and recuperation to hyper-performativity.
- Author
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Macfarlane, Bruce
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,EDUCATIONAL change ,HISTORICAL literature ,LITERARY sources ,ARCHIVAL resources ,AUSTRALIAN literature - Abstract
The sabbatical provides an important illustration of the changing nature of academic life and is a symbol of the growing demands of performativity. Drawing on historical literature and archival sources concerning university sabbaticals at Australian and English universities, the paper demonstrates that underlying assumptions about its purposes have changed slowly, but markedly, over time. A shift has occurred from a conception of the sabbatical as a period of rest, recuperation and academic travel to one of hyper-productivity. This change is linked to the emergence of the so-called research university, the rise of performativity, and the increasing demands of an audit culture. The academic sabbatical is also an often forgotten but significant indicator of the internationalisation of universities in the nineteenth and early to mid-twentieth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. De-centering dichotomies in wartime labor: trajectories of gender, coercion, and agency in the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (1964-2016).
- Author
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Henshaw, Alexis
- Subjects
ARMED Forces ,DIPLOMATIC history ,ARCHIVAL resources ,GENDER ,AGENT (Philosophy) - Abstract
Labor history and international relations (IR) each offer insights regarding the extent to which women contribute to non-state armed groups and the value of their labor. Yet questions remain about how agency in joining armed movements – and, conversely, the forced participation of women – are operationalized and even fetishized by observers. Positivist empirical work in IR has operationalized agency and coercion as a dichotomy in gendered wartime labor, implying that where women's labor is coerced it may have a lesser impact on the conduct of conflict or conflict outcomes. This paper challenges the existence of an agency-coercion binary, drawing on the case of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). Analyzing archival sources in a manner informed by both feminist international relations and labor history scholarship, I show the complex interplay of agency and coercion in women's lived experience within a non-state armed group. I further reflect on how a temporal understanding of labor relations, examining coercion and choice at the moments of entry, work, and exit, contributes to a more complete understanding of the gender dynamics of wartime labor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Stephen Taber and the development of North American cryostratigraphy and periglacial geomorphology.
- Author
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Nelson, Frederick E. and French, Hugh M.
- Subjects
PERMAFROST ,GEOMORPHOLOGY ,FROST heaving ,COLD regions ,GEOTECHNICAL engineering ,ARCHIVAL resources - Abstract
Stephen Taber's early work on ice segregation and frost heaving was far ahead of its time. His laboratory experiments regarding ice segregation led to our current understanding of frost heave by civil and geotechnical engineers building roads and other structures in cold regions. It also laid the foundation for later process‐oriented field studies of cold‐climate geomorphic processes. Taber's 1943 regional monograph on the origin and history of perennially frozen ground in Alaska, published by the Geological Society of America, was the earliest example of regional cryostratigraphy, and pioneered the regional permafrost and Quaternary studies undertaken later by Katasonov, Popov, Mackay, Péwé, Hopkins, and others. An important dimension of Taber's Alaska work was his application of knowledge gained through laboratory experimentation to the interpretation of ground‐ice exposures in the field. While S. W. Muller is widely regarded as the "father" of permafrost studies in North America, Taber is properly viewed as the "progenitor" of cryostratigraphic studies, although he is not yet widely regarded as such. This study uses archival resources to provide historical context regarding the development of Taber's monograph, to investigate details about the review and publication process it underwent, and to explore the question of why it remains undervalued. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Politics of Gender Modification in the Twenty-First Century Nigeria: The Case of Bobrisky.
- Author
-
Nwigwe, Chukwuemeka and Ochuba, Primrose
- Subjects
TWENTY-first century ,LGBTQ+ activists ,BODY marking ,GENDER ,ARCHIVAL resources - Abstract
Born Idris Olarenwaju Okuneye in 1991, Bobrisky has arguably taken the politics of gender modification to a height worthy of a certain degree of scholarly attention. The self-acclaimed Mummy of Lagos, and the biggest girl in Nigeria has been a sensational cross-dresser and transgender activist for over a decade. This article focuses on Bobrisky and his subversive cross-dressing and body modification attempts. It explores his power, influence, wealth, connections, and many contradictions that his lifestyle epitomizes. Archival and secondary sources have yielded the data underpinning this paper. It specifically draws from the conceptual frame, "warrior cross-dresser," found in the recent article by Unoma Azuah on Bobrisky to argue that Bobrisky exemplifies the politics of gender modification in twenty-first century Nigeria. The authors argue that Bobrisky's lavish lifestyle seen online and offline serves as an inducement for future male cross-dressers in Nigeria and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. LA BBC EN GUERRA EN ESPAÑA: UNA MISIÓN ESPECIAL PARA EL SERVICIO ESPAÑOL, 1939-1945.
- Author
-
García González, Gloria
- Subjects
SOFT power (Social sciences) ,ARCHIVAL resources ,CIVIL society ,WAR powers ,MEMOIRS ,WORLD War II - Abstract
Copyright of Futuro del Pasado: Revista Electrónica de Historia is the property of Futuro del Pasado: Revista Electronica de Historia 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
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Roma in the history of Montenegro – displacement, marginalization and discrimination.
- Author
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Vuković-Ćalasan, Danijela and Đoković, Rajka
- Subjects
- *
ARCHIVAL resources , *ETHNOGRAPHIC analysis , *RACE discrimination , *MATERIALS analysis , *SOCIAL marginality - Abstract
The history of Roma population in Montenegro has been a history of exclusion, displacement, and refusal by the rest of the Montenegrin society. Members of other ethnocultural communities in Montenegro, social actors, and institutions are not sufficiently aware of the importance of understanding the position of this community in historical terms. The methodology applied in this paper entails analysis of ethnographic material, unpublished archival sources as well as relevant legal and political documents. The aim of the paper is to examine the deep historical roots of exclusion, marginalization and frequent migration of the Roma population in Montenegro in different periods of history. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The second wave of the Spanish influenza pandemic in selected regions and towns of Slovakia (1918).
- Author
-
Szeghy-Gayer, Veronika
- Subjects
INFLUENZA pandemic, 1918-1919 ,PANDEMICS ,INFLUENZA ,WORLD maps ,ARCHIVAL resources ,HISTORIOGRAPHY - Abstract
Background: Very few researches have been carried out on the Spanish influenza pandemic and its consequences in the territory of Slovakia. Objectives: The paper constitutes an attempt to investigate the second wave of the pandemic between September and December 1918. It aims to reflect on the following questions: when did the outbreak of the pandemic occur in this region?; what measures were taken during the second wave of the Spanish flu in autumn 1918?; to what extent and based on what data can the number of infected and fatalities be determined? Methods: The research is based on the study of archival sources, as well as the local press, and the county periodicals, in which the official number of infections and deaths were published. Results: The first part of the paper is dedicated to the historiographical reflections, and outlines the possible reasons why historiography has not, so far, examined this question. Here it is argued that on the one hand the focus of the Hungarian and the Slovak historiographies were put on presenting the larger political, social, and economic context and consequences of the creation of Czechoslovakia and the history of the Peace Treaty in Trianon, while on the other hand, scholars have to face the lack of accurate statistical data. The second part of the study provides a short overview of the course of the pandemic in Slovakia and try to make estimates on the number of infections and fatalities based on contemporary statistics. Conclusions: Partial data suggest that around 0.5% of the population of Slovakia may have fallen victim to the epidemic. However, the study presents only the current status of the research, and data are not available for all regions of Slovakia at the moment. Therefore, further research is required to map the impact of the world pandemic on Slovakia, in regions that are missing in such analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Post-WWII migration flows in micro-perspective: The case of the east Slovak small town Medzev.
- Author
-
Juhászová, Tereza
- Subjects
HUMAN migration patterns ,SMALL cities ,POSTWAR reconstruction ,FORCED migration ,WORLD War II ,LINGUISTIC change ,NINETEENTH century ,ARCHIVAL resources - Abstract
Background: During World War II and in its aftermath, Central Europe was exposed to huge migration waves. People of different religions and various mother tongues had to leave their homes and newcomers settled in the abandoned places. This paper focuses on a small town, Medzev, located on the southern edge of Spiš (eastern Slovakia), which was until the end of World War II inhabited mainly by a German-speaking population. Although the region faced emigration waves in the 19th century, it was during and after World War II when local people experienced forced migration on the order of the authorities. Local German-speaking inhabitants were "evacuated" to northern Moravia because of the approaching Red Army in autumn 1944. During the next year they tried to come back home, only to be interned in local concentration camps. Those, who remained in town faced in the first months of 1945 removal to the Soviet Union (USSR). During 1946 and 1947, the inhabitants of Medzev tried to escape from the state-ordered expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia. However, the most important migration flow which changed the linguistic character of the town came only during the 1960s, when the larger metalworking plant Strojsmalt was established in Medzev. The factory offered a wide range of job opportunities that stimulated flows of economic migration of Slovak-, Ruthenian- or Hungarian-speaking workers from neighboring villages. Objectives: While exploring local post-conflict and post-migration settings, this paper focuses on everyday life in the intimate small town community. How was the Medzev population influenced by post-war migration flows? What effects did the economic migration connected with socialist industrializationave on the prevalently German-speaking community? Conclusion: Drawing on archival sources and oral testimonies, this paper aims to show the microperspective of the post-war migration flows and interactions in an east Slovak small town. It claims that the dominance of German speakers in the remote town of Medzev was not ended by the postwar expulsion in late 1940s, but rather by economic migration flows connected with socialist industrialization in following decades. However, the relations between local German speakers with job-seeking Slovak "newcomers" were not conflictual and both groups adapted to each other. This paper argues that in the examined micro space, people were connected mainly through their working experience in the factory Strojsmalt and lived together without major conflicts. During the period of state socialism, it was mainly membership in the Communist Party that mattered, not the mother tongue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Fonografický archiv české Akademie věd.
- Author
-
VLČKOVÁ-MEJVALDOVÁ, Jana
- Subjects
NATIVE language instruction ,ARCHIVAL resources ,HISTORY of archives ,SOUND recordings ,ARCHIVES - Abstract
Copyright of Bohemistyka is the property of Instytut Filologii Slowianskiej Uniwersytetu im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu 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
46. K vývoji akademické přípravy učitelů v českých zemích.
- Author
-
Rýdl, Karel and Novotný, Miroslav
- Subjects
TEACHER development ,TEACHER training ,SCIENTIFIC literature ,ARCHIVAL resources ,NINETEENTH century - Abstract
Copyright of Pedagogická Orientace is the property of Pedagogicka Orientace 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
47. "A PHOTOGRAPHIC STUDIO ACCORDING TO THE ADJOINED PLAN". NEW ARCHIVAL SOURCES FOR THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY BUCHAREST.
- Author
-
ULIERIU-ROSTÁS, THEODOR E.
- Subjects
HISTORICAL source material ,PHOTOGRAPHIC darkrooms ,ARCHIVAL resources ,ARCHITECTURAL history ,CARTOGRAPHIC materials ,HISTORY of photography ,NINETEENTH century ,ARCHITECTURAL studios - Abstract
This paper presents the first results of an ongoing survey of photographers and photographic studios in 19th and early 20th-century archival records created by the municipality of Bucharest, Romania. Following the gradual development of urban regulations in the 1830s and 1840s, any construction work carried out within the boundaries of the city was subjected to a formal building permission handled by the municipal architect, and later by the Technical Department of the municipality. This pertained as well to the construction of studios or the alteration of pre-existing structures in view of accommodating a photographic studio. The archival fonds thus generated provide us with a largely untapped primary source for the history of photography in Bucharest. The archival records discussed in this paper concern two of Bucharest's foremost photographers in the 19th century, Carol Szathmári and Franz Duschek. Corroborated with cartographic material and press sources, the retrieved building permissions bring significant clarification to the chronology and the changing urban contexts of their photographic practice, while the accompanying architectural projects shed new light on the spatial organization of their residences and studios. The arguments advanced in this paper notably lead to the identification of Duschek's surviving studio house on strada Nouă (today str. Edgar Quinet), and to the localization of several exterior shots in the immediate vicinity of Duschek's provisional studio in No. 21 Calea Mogoșoaiei. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
48. CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE DEPOSITS.
- Author
-
Bird, Stephen
- Subjects
ARCHIVES ,ARCHIVAL resources ,LABOR movement ,SOCIAL movements ,LABOR unions ,INFORMATION services ,LIBRARY resources - Abstract
Presents a lists of archives on labor movements and trade unions in Great Britain abstracted from "Accessions to Repositories and Reports Added to the National Register of Archives, 1986." Amalgamated Engineering Union; Horwich Locomotive Works; Brecon and Radnor Labour Party; Arts Council; Workers Educational Association.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Primary Sources for the Study of Studio Craft.
- Author
-
Kirwin, Liza
- Subjects
ARCHIVAL resources ,ARTISTS' studios ,AMERICAN art ,ART ,ARTISTS - Abstract
The author looks at several sources for the study of studio craft like the Archives of American Art project of the Smithsonian Institution. She stated that the Archives is a source of scholarship materials including original letters, diaries and unpublished writings. She gives an overview of the Nanette L. Laitman Documentation Project for Craft and Decorative Arts in America initiative which aims to record and transcribe more than one hundred oral history interviews to collect the personal papers of artists.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. James Croll and 1876: an exceptional year for a 'singularly modest man'.
- Author
-
EDWARDS, Kevin J.
- Subjects
HONORARY degrees ,ARCHIVAL resources ,GEOLOGICAL surveys ,CLIMATE change ,PALEOCLIMATOLOGY - Abstract
James Croll left school at the age of 13 years, yet while a janitor in Glasgow he published a landmark paper on astronomically-related climate change, claimed as 'the most important discovery in paleoclimatology', and which brought him to the attention of Charles Darwin, William Thomson and John Tyndall, amongst others. By 1867 he was persuaded to become Secretary and Accountant of the newly established Geological Survey of Scotland in Edinburgh, and a year after the appearance of his keynote volume Climate and time in 1875, he was lauded with an honorary doctorate from Scotland's oldest university, Fellowship of the Royal Society of London and Honorary Membership of the New York Academy of Sciences. Using a range of archival and published sources, this paper explores aspects of his 'journey' and the background to the award of these major accolades. It also discusses why he never became a Fellow of his national academy, the Royal Society of Edinburgh. In the world of 19th-Century science, Croll was not unusual in being both an autodidact and of humble origins, nor was he lacking in support for his endeavours. It is possible that a combination of Croll's modesty and innovative genius fostered advancement, though this did not hinder a willingness to engage in vigorous argument. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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