Description
About the Author
Kate Peters trained as an archivist in 1988-89 and completed a PhD in History in 1996. She has lectured in records and archives management at UCL, and in History at Universities of Birmingham and Cambridge. Her first book, Print Culture and the Early Quakers, examined the role of print in the early Quaker movement of the 1650s. She is currently working on the politics of record keeping in the English civil wars. Alexandra Walsham is a graduate of the Universities of Melbourne and Cambridge. She taught at the University of Exeter for many years before taking up her current appointment at Cambridge. She has published widely on the religious and cultural history of early modern England and her current research, supported by a Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship, explores the intersections between the Reformation and generational change. She is also the Principal Investigator of the AHRC project, 'Remembering the Reformation'. She became a Fellow of the British Academy in 2009 and was made a CBE in 2017. Liesbeth Corens is Career Development Fellow at Keble College, Oxford. She is currently completing a book manuscript on Confessional Mobility and English Catholics in Counter-Reformation Europe for Oxford University Press. Her other project centres on creating counter-archives among Catholic minorities in early modern England and the Netherlands. With Kate Peters and Alexandra Walsham, she co-edited 'The Social History of the Archives: Record-Keeping in Early Modern Europe', Past and Present, supplement 11 (2016).
Reviews
it should be on the reading list of every student interested in the history of archives. Taken together with similar developments in the history of paper, diplomatic letterwriting, the news, and court history, these contributions promise to turn a history of text-as-discourse into a social history of texts as intellectual, social, and material artifacts. * Tom Toelle, Universitat Hamburg, Renaissance Quarterly *
...the three editors of this volume and the contributors offer us a splendid volume indeed that is a pleasure to read. The contributors include most historians and archivists who have made a discernible impact on the history of the early modern archive in Europe...Overall, this is a fascinating book for anyone interested in archives or early modern Europe, and has several excellent chapters that can be used for teaching. * Konrad Hirschler, Freie Universitat Berlin, European History Quarterly *
This important and highly engaging book goes a long way, at least, to helping us navigate the complex and contested issues which underpin the nature of what we know about the past. * Naiel Starza Smith, Library & Information History *
an interesting read and would be excellent for students of both history and archives * New England Archivists *
Book Information
ISBN 9780197266250
Author Kate Peters
Format Hardback
Page Count 350
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Weight(grams) 698g
Dimensions(mm) 242mm * 163mm * 27mm