Improving our Disposition: Documentation Strategy
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When Terry Cook, on behayof the ACA, invited me to be a plenary speaker at the Banff meeting, I was both delighted and a bit apprehensive. My Canadian colleagues have proven to be valuable but severe critics of my work. Terry suggested that as the theme of the meeting was appraisal, this would be an excellent opportunity for me to speak about documentation strategies and h a w both the commentator and the audience wrestle with these ideas. I agreed to the proposal.
[1] Clark A. Elliott. Communication and Events in History: Toward a Theory for Documenting the Past , 1985 .
[2] David Bearman,et al. The Power of the Principle of Provenance , 1985 .
[3] W. Kaye Lamb. The Archivist and the Historian , 1963 .
[4] D. Lowenthal,et al. The Past is a Foreign Country , 1986 .
[5] Peter B. Hirtle,et al. Understanding Progress As Process: Documentation of the History of Post-War Science and Technology in the United States , 1983 .