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A Usable Collection: Essays in Honour of Jaap Kloosterman on Collecting Social History: Work around the Globe: Historical Comparisons

Editat de Jan Lucassen, Huub Sanders, Aad Blok
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 4 dec 2014
Established in 1935, the International Institute of Social History (IISH) is one of the world’s leading research institutes focused on social history and holds one of the richest collections in the field. This volume brings together thirty-five essays in honor of the IISH’s longtime director Jaap Kloosterman, who built the institute into a world leader in the field.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789089646880
ISBN-10: 9089646884
Pagini: 473
Ilustrații: Illustrated
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 33 mm
Greutate: 1.08 kg
Editura: Amsterdam University Press
Colecția Amsterdam University Press
Seria Work around the Globe: Historical Comparisons


Notă biografică

Aad Blok is executive editor of the International Review of Social History. Jan Lucassen is professor of international and comparative social history at VU University Amsterdam. Huub Sanders is a research staff member for collection development at the International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam.

Cuprins

Preface
Henk Wals
Social History Sources, Knowledge and Research
Introduction to A Usable Collection
Aad Blok, Jan Lucassen and Huub Sanders
How to Qualify for the Directorate of the iish?
Jan Lucassen
Part I – the emergence of social history collections
I.1 Prolegomena to a Social History of Dutch Archives
Eric Ketelaar
I.2 The founder of the iish, as Experienced by his Daughter
Interview with Claire Posthumus
Huub Sanders
I.3 Looking for Traces of Huizinga
His Relation with N.W. Posthumus,
Based on Unpublished Letters and a Text
Huub Sanders
I.4 Working for the Institute
Kees de Dood, N.W. Posthumus and
the International Institute of Social History, 1940-1950
Alex Geelhoed
I.5 The Persistent Life of The British Merchant
Co Seegers
I.6 Harry Stevens, the British “Correspondent” of David Rjazanov’s Institute
On the History of Collecting at the Marx-Engels Institute (1927-1931)
Irina Novichenko
I.7 The Importance of Friendship
The Shared History of the iav/iiav and iish
Francisca de Haan and Annette Mevis
Part II – the european collections of the iish:
acquisitions and catalogues
II.1 A Broken Mirror
The Library of Ferdinand Domela Nieuwenhuis
Bert Altena
II.2 The Archives of Hendrik de Man
A Tragedy
Wouter Steenhaut
II.3 Trying to find a Masked Man
An Unfinished Investigation
Marien van der Heijden and Franck Veyron
II.4 La Rosa de Foc
Collecting Anarchist Materials
Andrew H. Lee
II.5 The Key to the Library’s Collection
Rules and Practices
Coen Marinus
II.6 From Ice Age to Global Warming
The Libraries of the Amsterdam iish and the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (fes)
Rudiger Zimmermann
II.7 Does a History Research Institute Need its Own Archive?
Karl Heinz Roth
II.8 A Manuscript Found at the Institute
Kees Rodenburg
II.9 Did Castoriadis Suppress a Letter from Pannekoek?
A Note on the Debate regarding the “Organizational Question” in the 1950s
Marcel van der Linden
II.10 Matriarchy and Socialism
French Precedents
Francis Ronsin
II.11 Neo-Malthusians
A Photograph
Jenneke Quast
II.12 Secret Suitcases
Dutch Communist Party Papers
Margreet Schrevel
II.13 Long live the Library!
The Book Collections of the iish in particular the knaw Library
Elise van Nederveen Meerkerk
II.14 The iish as a Trailblazer in Technology in the 1990s
Jaap Kloosterman’s Transformative Breakthroughs
Henk Wals
Part III – the iish and eastern europe
III.1 Publications of Posrednik and Svobodnoe Slovo Publishing Houses
in iish’s Russian Collections
Els Wagenaar
III.2 Bakunin and Bacon Cake
E-editing in Social History
Lex Heerma van Voss
III.3 The Activities in Moscow after 1991 and Memorial
Francesca Gori
III.4 Rescue Efforts in Post-Soviet Moscow
Nanci Adler
III.5 Archival Revolution and “Intellectual Access” in Russia
ArcheoBiblioBase in Moscow and Amsterdam
Patricia Kennedy Grimsted
III.6 Sources for Writing the History of Russia and the Soviet Union
National and Transnational Perspectives
Gijs Kessler
III.7 The Making of Collective Memory
The Politics of Archive in the Soviet Azerbaijan
Touraj Atabaki and Solmaz Rustamova-Towhidi
Part IV – the iisg goes global
IV.1 The long Journey of the dhkp Archive
From the Turkish Prisons to the iish
Zulfikar Ozdoğan
IV.2 The Egyptian and Sudanese Communist Collections
Roel Meijer
IV.3 Collecting under Uncertainty
The Creation of the Chinese People’s Movement Archive
Tony Saich
IV.4 From Dhaka with Love
The Nepal Nag Papers and the Sino-Soviet Split
Willem van Schendel
IV.5 The Role of Archives and Archivists in the Contemporary Age
in Ensuring the Transmission of Collective Memory
Stefano Bellucci
IV.6 Gunnar Mendoza
A Life to Share
Rossana Barragan Romano
Jaap Kloosterman
A Tentative Bibliography
Notes on the Contributors
Index