Category: Archiving

  • Replacing Ireland’s Lost Records: Doing Public History with the Beyond 2022 Project

    Replacing Ireland’s Lost Records: Doing Public History with the Beyond 2022 Project

    By Elizabeth Biggs One hundred years ago, in the spring and early summer of 1922, the Public Record Office of Ireland in the Four Courts complex in Dublin was occupied by anti-Treaty forces, with Rory O’Connor as one of their leaders. They were opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty of the previous year, which they felt…

  • Will Africa be included in a global history of Covid-19?

    Will Africa be included in a global history of Covid-19?

    ANNA ADIMA Over a year into the Covid-19 pandemic, one would be hard-pressed to deny that future history books will record this as a global milestone in the 21st century. Every individual around the world has in some way been affected by the virus; however, mainstream – Western – media remains guilty of underreporting the pandemic…

  • Analysing Jacobite Prisoner Lists with JDB45

    Analysing Jacobite Prisoner Lists with JDB45

    Analogous Analysis Paralysis: The Stultifying Weltschmerz of Jacobite Prisoner Lists DR DARREN SCOTT LAYNE Now nearly three centuries on from Jacobitism’s imminent threat to the British post-revolution state, the movement’s historical record is still a living entity with plenty of room for growth. To wit, the demographic characteristics of both domestic and international participation in…

  • Innovating Digital History in the Classroom: an interview with  Drs James Baker and Sharon Webb

    Innovating Digital History in the Classroom: an interview with Drs James Baker and Sharon Webb

    Back in July, the Royal Historical Association awarded its 2019 Innovation in Teaching Award to Dr James Baker and Dr Sharon Webb at the University of Sussex. This week Stephanie Wright from History caught up with both prize winners to learn more about how they incorporate digital history into their undergraduate teaching. History: Can you…

  • Using Scrapbooks as Historical Sources

    Using Scrapbooks as Historical Sources

    Cherish Watton. Think of any topic, and someone, somewhere, has probably made a scrapbook on it. People scrapbooked on things which were important to them; family, friendships, professional activity, popular culture, political, and associational activity. Scrapbooks didn’t just document family life. Politicians and diplomats turned to scrapbooks to record their careers and were often acknowledged…