Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Silence of the Archive [Pehme köide]

Other , Other , Other , (University of Wales Bangor), Other
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 231x155x13 mm, kaal: 295 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-May-2017
  • Kirjastus: ALA Neal-Schuman
  • ISBN-10: 0838916406
  • ISBN-13: 9780838916407
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 231x155x13 mm, kaal: 295 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-May-2017
  • Kirjastus: ALA Neal-Schuman
  • ISBN-10: 0838916406
  • ISBN-13: 9780838916407
Teised raamatud teemal:
Records and archives, whether maintained by individuals, organizations, or community groups, are important sources that provide evidence of, and information about, the course of their creators and the environment in which those actions occurred. But at time incompleteness can be frustrating to those who seek to use them. The authors explore the societal impact of records and archives, and the consequences that result when records are absent or uniformative. They look at the ways in which the lack of comprehensive record keeping creates "silences" which, though unsettling to some, are sometimes inevitable.
Introduction to the Series ix
Geoffrey Yeo
About the authors xiii
Foreword xv
Anne J. Gill Hand
Introduction xix
David Thomas
1 Enforced silences
1(40)
Simon Fowler
Introduction
1(2)
The power of the written
3(3)
Silence in informality
6(3)
Conflict and oppression as a cause of silence
9(5)
Selection as a cause of the silence
14(3)
The wrong kind of silence
17(5)
The silence of the secret
22(7)
The silence of destruction
29(5)
Conclusion
34(7)
2 Inappropriate expectations
41(24)
Simon Fowler
Introduction
41(1)
`Writing lived lives': the skewing of the archive record
42(3)
When silence means silence: what records cannot tell us
45(3)
Silence in other ways: cultural differences
48(5)
The catalogue -- hiding silences in plain view
53(7)
Conclusion
60(5)
3 The digital
65(36)
David Thomas
Introduction
65(1)
Digital preservation
66(2)
New dangers
68(13)
E-mails
81(1)
Digitized records
82(2)
More information equals less knowledge
84(3)
Authenticity
87(2)
Capturing the archive
89(1)
An existential threat to archives?
90(3)
The future
93(2)
Conclusion
95(6)
4 Dealing with the silence
101(16)
Valerie Johnson
Introduction
101(1)
False silences
101(1)
False voices
102(1)
Forcing open the doors: letting hidden voices speak
103(1)
Filling the silence: allowing silent voices to speak
103(2)
Acknowledging the silence as silence
105(1)
Filling the silence: finding alternative voices
106(1)
Reading voices back into history
107(1)
Looking forward: Listening to all the voices
107(1)
Avoiding `white noise': the need for some silence
108(2)
Creating and welcoming the silence
110(3)
Conclusion
113(4)
5 Imagining archives
117(24)
David Thomas
Introduction
117(1)
Imagining archives
117(2)
The slave trade
119(1)
Imagined re-creations
120(1)
Forging archives
121(1)
Imagining Shakespeare
122(10)
Further into the hall of mirrors
132(2)
Complete fictions
134(1)
What does forgery tell us about archives?
135(1)
Conclusion
136(5)
6 Solutions to the silence
141(22)
Valerie Johnson
Introduction
141(1)
Is legislation the answer?
141(1)
Challenging silence in the archives: the archivists
142(7)
Users as creators: taking back the power
149(4)
Accepting inevitable silence
153(1)
Changing voices in a new digital world
154(4)
Conclusion
158(5)
7 Are things getting better or worse?
163(18)
David Thomas
Index 181