Affiliation:
1. University of Georgia, Athens, USA
2. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA
Abstract
This introduction provides a context for the collection of essays that follow in this special issue on research methodology related to studying children’s creations in archives. First, we center children’s creations as significant sources for interdisciplinary researchers interested in learning more about children’s contributions to history, the historical record, and childhood studies. We then describe some of the politics and practices—including preservation, cataloging, and circulation—within formal and informal archiving that may have implications for scholars attempting to use archived children’s creations. We then offer some examples of research that focus on children’s perspectives, accounts, or archival sources, highlighting some of the ethical concerns these have raised. Finally, we introduce the papers that make up this issue, with contributions from many disciplines and discussions of several media types.
Subject
Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Anthropology
Reference37 articles.
1. Can the Girl Guide Speak?: The Perils and Pleasures of Looking for Children's Voices in Archival Research
2. Made by Hand (2007)
3. Carter R. G. (2006). Of things said and unsaid: Power, archival silences, and power in silence. Archivaria, 61, 215–233. https://archivaria.ca/index.php/archivaria/article/view/12541