The Birth of the Archive: A History of Knowledge

The Birth of the Archive: A History of Knowledge

The Birth of the Archive: A History of Knowledge

The Birth of the Archive: A History of Knowledge

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Overview

The Birth of the Archive traces the history of archives from their emergence in the Late Middle Ages through the Early Modern Period, and vividly shows how archives permeated and fundamentally changed European culture. Archives were compiled and maintained by peasants and kings, merchants and churchmen, and conceptions of archives were as diverse as those who used them. The complex, demanding job of the archivist was just as variable: archivists might serve as custodians, record-keepers, librarians, legal experts, historians, scholars, researchers, public officials, or some combination thereof; navigating archives was often far from straightforward. The shift of archival storage from haphazard collections of papers to the methodically organized institutionalized holdings of the nineteenth century was a gradual, nonlinear process.

Friedrich provides an essential background to the history of archives over the centuries and enriches the story of their evolution with chapters on key sociocultural aspects of European archival culture. He discusses their meaning and symbolism in European thought, early modern conceptions of the archive’s function, and questions of access and usability. Exploring the close, often vexed relationship between archives and political power, Friedrich illustrates the vulnerability of archives to political upheaval and war. He concludes with an introspective look at how historians used their knowledge of and work with archives to create distinct representations of themselves and their craft.

The Birth of the Archive engages with scholarship in political history, the history of mentalities, conceptions of space, historiography, and the history of everyday life in early modern Europe. It has much to offer for specialists and scholars, while the jargon-free prose of this translation is also accessible to the general reader.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780472123551
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Publication date: 02/26/2018
Series: Cultures Of Knowledge In The Early Modern World
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 296
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Markus Friedrich is Professor of Early Modern History, University of Hamburg. John Noël Dillon (translator) is a Lecturer in Ecclesiastical Latin, Yale Divinity School.

Table of Contents

Contents Abbreviations 1. Stories and Histories of Archives: An Introduction Archives as Places of Knowledge Stories and Histories of Archives: In Praise of Praxis Research Traditions The “Archival Turn” in Cultural Studies Why the Early Modern Period? Epochs of Archival History About This Book 2. Documents: Filling Archives—A Prologue The Origins of a Pragmatic Literacy Preserving Documents with Cartularies and Registers Franz Pehem in Altenburg, or: Pragmatic Literacy at the Dawn of the Early Modern Period 3. Founding: Archives Become Institutions and Spread Early Princely Archives in France and Germany Archives Everywhere: Quantitative and Geographic Expansion Archives for Everyone: Corporations, Churches, Noblemen Territorial Archival Policy between Center and Periphery After Founding Institutionalized Unusability: Joly de Fleury and Le Nain in the Archive of the Parlement of Paris 4. Projections: Archives in Early Modern Thought Talking about Archives: Texts and Contexts Purposes of Archives: Remembrance and Stabilization across Social Orders Useless and Disorienting, Surprising and Unmanageable Archives Early Modern Sketches of European Archival History Oral and Written Archives in Europe and Abroad Semantics and Metaphors: From Archive to “Archive” 5. People: Archives and Those Who Used Them Archivists The Illegible Archive: Practical Challenges Are Archivists Scholars? “Keep Calm!” Everyday Life in the Archives and the Archivists’ Persona Visitors and Visits Private and Public Documents: Papers and Archives as Private Property Radical Personalizations: Theft and the Helplessness of Archives 6. Places: Archives as Spatial Structures and Documents as Movable Objects Archive Rooms: Protective Shells for Fragile Contents The Well-Ordered Archive as a Spatial Ideal Suites and Surroundings: Archives as Parts of Buildings The Creation of Order in Space: Archive Furniture A “Ship Full of Documents,” or: The Mobility of Early Modern Archives 7. Power(lessness): Archives as Resources, Symbols, and Objects of Power Princes’ Rights, or: Archives of Royal Laws Subjects’ Obligations, or: Archives and Feudal Prerogatives What to Do? or: Archives in Decision-Making Processes Expert Reports, or: The Processed Archive Partitioning and Regime Change: Archives between Pragmatism and Symbolism Archives in War and Peace 8. Sources: Archives in Historiography and Genealogy Before Historicism Why Archival Research? Fear of Historians: History between Politics and Scholarship Secrecy as Project and Projection: The Possibilities and Limitations of Scholarly Archive Access Controlling Archival Work: Research Opportunities and Limitations Working in the Archives Archival Trips and Transregional Collaboration Aristocrats, Archives, Ancestors: Genealogy as a Scholarly Practice Talking about Archival Work, or: The Archive as a Historiographical Narrative Topos Epilogue: The Premodern and Modern Archive Notes Bibliography Illustration Credits Index
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