1.Classic Writings. Individuals wanting to gain an understanding
of archives and archival work will need to examine, at some point, the classic
writings in the field providing a foundation for both archival knowledge and
practice. A small number of important
texts have constructed the primary foundation of the knowledge of archives and
records management. These works are the
starting point for archives and records management theory, methodology, and
practice and are the most frequently cited in debates, continuing discussion,
and even research in this field. The
oldest modern manual is that written for the pioneering archival association in
the Netherlands and published more than a century ago, S. Muller, J.A. Feith,
and R. Fruin, Manual for the Arrangement
and Description of Archives (New York: H.W. Wilson, 1968; org. published 1898),
valuable for how it discusses the organic nature of records and recordkeeping
systems. Sir Hilary Jenkinson, A Manual
of Archive Administration, rev. 2nd ed. (London: Percy Lund, Humphries &
Co., Ltd., 1966; org. published 1922) and the two works by his American
counterpart T. R. Schellenberg, Modern Archives: Principles and Techniques
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1956) and Management of Archives
(Washington, DC: National Archives, 1965; reprint), remain among the most
frequently cited by both archival theorists and practitioners, although they
split archivists because of their different emphases on the archival mission
and how the archivist works with records creators and users. The Jenkinson and Schellenberg writings are
so frequently cited because they defined the contours of archival knowledge and
practice, and so many debates today start with references to them or cite them
as authorities because of this. Archival
practitioners and those wanting an introduction to the field need to have read
these works because they are authorities but also because at times more is
attributed to them than should be.
2. In case
individuals might worry that these classics are not relevant to modern records
work, they should read Thornton W. Mitchell, ed., Norton on Archives: The
Writings of Margaret Cross Norton on Archival & Records Management
(Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1975), a work that is, sadly,
out of print. However, Norton's
writings of the 1920s through the 1950s ably summarize the critically important
relationship between archival administration and records management in a way
that no recent writing has exceeded in quality or scope. Even those interested in electronic records
management can find much that is useful in Norton's essays, especially about
why records are important. This volume
emphasizes the continuing relevance much older writings might have for current
archival work, while at the same time not hamstringing modern practitioners in
what they do. However, none of these
pioneers envisioned all aspects of modern records issues and practices, and
those who argue that they do are often arguing for wishing for a return to
certain kinds of records work, as well as often resisting change.
3. Individuals searching for a quick
introduction to archival work might worry about the age of these
publications. However, if they ignore
gaining a basic understanding of what they represented in the development of
the archival field, they also risk missing the point of the more recent debates
and issues (especially electronic records management).