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Archive, slow ideology and egodocuments as microhistorical autobiography : potential history / Sigurður Gylfi Magnússon.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Routledge FocusDescription: 159 pages : illustrationsISBN:
  • 9781032010793
  • 9781032011967
Other title:
  • Archive, slow ideology and ego documents as microhistorical autobiography
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 954.027 MAG.A
Summary: "This book aims to demonstrate how scholars in recent times have been utilizing egodocuments from various angles and providing an opening for the multivocality of the sources to be fully appreciated. The first part of the book is concerned with the significance of egodocuments, both for the individual him/herself who creates such documents, and also for the other, who receives them. The author approaches the subject on the basis of his own personal experience, and goes on to discuss the importance of such documents for the academic world, emphasizing more general questions and issues within the fields of historiography, philosophy of history, microhistory, and memory studies. The second part of the book is based upon a photographic collection - an archive - that belonged to the author's grandfather, who over decades accumulated photographs of vagabonds and outsiders. This part seeks to explore what kind of knowledge can be applied when a single source - an archive, document, letter, illustration, etc. - is examined, and whether the knowledge derived may not be quite as good in its own context as in the broader perspective"--
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Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Reference Reference Dept. of History Dept. of History 954.027 MAG.A (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan HIS14561

Includes bibliographical references (pages 146-154) and index.

"This book aims to demonstrate how scholars in recent times have been utilizing egodocuments from various angles and providing an opening for the multivocality of the sources to be fully appreciated. The first part of the book is concerned with the significance of egodocuments, both for the individual him/herself who creates such documents, and also for the other, who receives them. The author approaches the subject on the basis of his own personal experience, and goes on to discuss the importance of such documents for the academic world, emphasizing more general questions and issues within the fields of historiography, philosophy of history, microhistory, and memory studies. The second part of the book is based upon a photographic collection - an archive - that belonged to the author's grandfather, who over decades accumulated photographs of vagabonds and outsiders. This part seeks to explore what kind of knowledge can be applied when a single source - an archive, document, letter, illustration, etc. - is examined, and whether the knowledge derived may not be quite as good in its own context as in the broader perspective"--

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