Articolo
Versione Digitale
Artifex or philosophus additus artifici? : the role of the archivist reorganizing personal archives
P. 83-96
- How far the archivist could actively go − or should he go − processing on personal archives? This kind of archive is very often, during his creation, lacking a structure; in other cases it has been reorganized, selected and redefined by the same producer, his descendants and collaborators, and even by the previous “experts”. In these Fonds, the original small organization is intertwined with the desire to project an identity value in the archive, and intercepted by family members or other people: when is it appropriate to restore the original situation? How important is the traceability of the archivist's work? The presentation of some real situations illustrates the problems that can arise in various cases. [Publisher's text]
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Informazioni
Codice DOI: 10.4403/jlis.it-12553
ISSN: 2038-1026
PAROLE CHIAVE
- Archives, Personal archives, Archival reorganization, Processing of archival Fonds, History of archives
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Nello stesso fascicolo
- Personal archives : autobiography, representation and conservative strategies
- Ethics and cataloguing
- What were librarians doing while Otlet was inventing documentation? : the modernization and professionalization of librarianship during the Belle Époque
- Private archives in the library : types, acquisition, treatment and description
- Understanding the archival fonds as autobiographical text through three discourses
- Se peindre pour ne pas se perdre : some thoughts on the archive as a self-representation
- The role of heirs in the transmission of the archive
- Artifex or philosophus additus artifici? : the role of the archivist reorganizing personal archives
- The Discovery tool is a growing organism
- Notarial archives as political objects in the early-modern Alps : the community of Valle Camonica
- Personal Libraries and Archives. Some thoughts at the end of the Conference The privilege of the written word: management, conservation and enhancement of personal papers and books (University of Salerno 10-12 April 2019)