Archives and History. Making Historical Knowledge in Europe during the Long Nineteenth Century

Archives and History. Making Historical Knowledge in Europe during the Long Nineteenth Century

Veranstalter
Dr. Philipp Müller, Seminar für Mittlere und Neuere Geschichte, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
Veranstaltungsort
Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Lichtenberg Kolleg IAS (Historische Sternwarte)
Ort
Göttingen
Land
Deutschland
Vom - Bis
26.06.2014 - 28.06.2014
Website
Von
Müller, Philipp

Under which institutional conditions were historians able to undertake historical studies in archives? And how did these conditions of historical-archival research impinge on the production of historical knowledge? In looking into these two inextricably interlinked matters, the symposium highlights an essential, and ultimately scientific, attribute of historical work, rising to prominence in Europe during the long nineteenth century. In order to advance our understanding of the history of the study of records and files, its performance and ramifications for the making of historical knowledge, the symposium draws on different strands of scholarship and gathers experts from different fields of research such as the history of historiography, the history of sciences, anthropology and the history of archives.

The symposium is generously funded by the Fritz Thyssen Stiftung and the Universitätsbund Göttingen e.V.

Programm

Programme

Thursday, 26 June 2014

3.30pm onwards Registration

4.00pm Welcome
Martin van Gelderen (Lichtenberg Kolleg, IAS Göttingen), Welcome

4.10m Introduction
Philipp Müller (Universität Göttingen), Annotations. Archives and History

4.30-6.00pm Keynote I

Stefan Berger (Universität Bochum), National Archives and National Master Narratives in Nineteenth Century Europe

Friday, 27 June 2014

8.30-10.30am Making Archives

Chair & Comment: Rebekka Habermas (University of Oxford)

Pablo A. Flores (EHESS Paris), La choix de la Nation: Selling, Forming and Selecting the Nationalized Archives

Henning Trüper (IAS Princeton), Making an Archival Scene: Littmann’s Autopsy of Aksumite Epigraphy

11.00-12.30pm Keynote II

Regina Bendix (Universität Göttingen), Archived and Archival Cultures - Ethnographic Reflections on Archival Habits

2.15-4.15pm Archival Order

Chair & Comment: Alf Lüdtke (Universität Erfurt)

Bettina Joergens (Landesarchiv NRW Detmold), Theory and History: The Principles of Structuring Archival Holdings

Yann Potin (Archives Nationales Paris), L'esprit de l'histoire dans les travaux d'archive? Les formes contradictoires de la conversion historiographique des archives en France

4.30-6.30pm Work in the Archive

Chair & Comment: Jörg Bölling (Universität Göttingen)

Pieter Hiustra (Universiteit Leuven), Copyists in the Archives: the Invisible Technicians of Nineteenth Century Historiography

Gerhard Fürmetz (Bayerisches Hauptstaatsarchiv München),
Authentic Replica? Media and Modes of Archival Reproductions in the late 19th and early 20th century

Saturday, 28 June 2014

8.30-11.00am Archives and Historical Knowledge

Chair & Comment: Hubertus Büschel (Universität Gießen)

Mario Wimmer (University of Berkeley), Foundational Figures of Historical Knowledge

David Laven (University of Nottingham), Nineteenth Century Historians and the Venetian State Archive

Philipp Müller (Universität Göttingen), Historical Research and Politics of Secrecy in Central Europe, c.1799-c.1850

11.15-12.15am Final Discussion

Chair: Philipp Müller (Universität Göttingen)
Discussants: Regina Bendix (Universität Göttingen)
Stefan Berger (Universität Bochum)
Bettina Joergens (Landesarchiv NRW Detmold)

Kontakt

Dr. Philipp Müller
Seminar für Mittlere und Neuere Geschichte
Heinrich-Düker-Weg 14
Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
D-37073 Göttingen
Germany

philipp.mueller@phil.uni-goettingen.de
++49 -551 39 21271
http://wwwuser.gwdg.de/~nzhaber/dfg.html


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