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The fetish of archives

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  • Robert Hogenraad

Abstract

Archives are primary sources of information for biographers, historians and social scientists. Yet the question about archives is how much information we overlook or transform: fiction and facts often interplay. We pinned a related question about the moral lesson present or not in archives. Do annals, chronicles, or histories settle or merely end accounts? Coupling authority and moral lesson in texts provides a way of linking archives of different degrees of accuracy: annals, chronicles, and histories. We identified the same series of events covered on three supports, as tapes, as memoir, and as film. The events in question concern the Cuban Missile Crisis of October 1962. We ran a computer-aided content analysis of these textual data and used words into assessing, first, the risk of conflict in the data, then the mood present in the data. Pure archives, such as tapes, do not succeed in reenacting nonverbal events. It is as if only fiction or imagination, in chronicles or stories, could do justice to a 3D reality and allow it to become history by naturalizing that reality. Copyright Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2014

Suggested Citation

  • Robert Hogenraad, 2014. "The fetish of archives," Quality & Quantity: International Journal of Methodology, Springer, vol. 48(1), pages 425-437, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:qualqt:v:48:y:2014:i:1:p:425-437
    DOI: 10.1007/s11135-012-9778-0
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Robert Hogenraad & Dean McKENZIE, 1999. "Replicating Text: The Cumulation of Knowledge in Social Science," Quality & Quantity: International Journal of Methodology, Springer, vol. 33(2), pages 97-116, May.
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    Cited by:

    1. Robert Hogenraad, 2024. "The face of words," Quality & Quantity: International Journal of Methodology, Springer, vol. 58(1), pages 497-526, February.
    2. Robert Hogenraad, 2019. "Fear in the West: a sentiment analysis using a computer-readable “Fear Index”," Quality & Quantity: International Journal of Methodology, Springer, vol. 53(3), pages 1239-1261, May.

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