methods and the archive constructing re-usable qualitative data dorothy sheridan mass observation...
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Methods and the ArchiveConstructing re-usable
qualitative data
Dorothy SheridanMass Observation Archive
University of Sussex
“Archives do not simply arrive or emerge fully formed; nor are they innocent of struggles for power in either their creation or their interpretative application. Though their own origins are often occluded and the exclusions on which they are premised often dimly understood, all archives come into being in and as history as a result of specific political, cultural and socio-economic pressures – pressures which leave traces and which render archives themselves artifacts of history”
Antoinette Burton: “Archive Fever, archive stories” in Archive stories: facts, fictions and
the writing of history. A Burton (ed), Duke UP 2005.
Mass Observation• A pioneering social
research organisation set up in 1937 in Britain
• Used anthropological methods to study “ourselves”
• Observation of social behaviour
• Recruitment of people to record their lives
The Archive
• Asa Briggs (VC) offered the collection a home at Sussex
• Tom Harrisson arrives with the papers 1970
• Official opening 1975• Archive set up as a
charitable trust• Supported by the
University of Sussex and by earnings and donations
Studies(by the Invs)SurveysOpinion pollsObservationsEthnographyPrinted ephemeraImages
Typed reports
Books,Articles
Personal Writing (from the Panel)DiariesDay SurveysDirective repliesLetters
Most public
LeastPublic“raw”
The concept of re-use and Mass Observation
Original MO 1937-50s
Re-use of original MO: 1
• The use of the papers as historical evidence in support of a research project on a particular theme (possibly in contrast to other more official sources and/or complementary to oral history projects):eg Bolton in the late 30s, the Blitz, wartime life, reactions to the Welfare State, women and war.
Re-use of original MO: 2
• Use of the papers to understand Mass Observation as a social phenomenon and its role in the social, political and cultural milieu of the 1930s, 1940s and 1950seg as part of the documentary movement of the 1930s, as evidence of a specific kinds of participatory political activity, as a manifestation of literary aspirations
Re-use 3
• Use of the papers to explore issues in relation to the process of doing research - methodology at both the collecting and interpretation stage: qualitative analysis, use of autobiographical material, ethical issues, questions on intellectual property and privacy and issues arising from editing for publication.
Re-use 4
• Use of the papers as a way of developing new projects and of learning from the way in which MO operated: revival projects and repeat projects eg the contemporary MO Project itself
Mass Observation re-launched?
• Recruitment of new national panel of writers in 1981
• Establishment of a pattern of three mailings per year on two or three themes
• Similar to - but not the same as - the original Panel
• Funded mainly by earnings from books & fees earned by early material
Characteristics of the new MO
• Backed by the Trustees but very much the personal enthusiasm of David Pocock for first 9 years, then continued by Dorothy Sheridan for the following 18 (ie to date)
• Independent of research bodies and the research councils or any strategic directions of the UoS
• Based within the original archive rather than in an academic dept and intrinsically linked to the active promotion of MO as a historical resource
• No commitment to analyse or interpret the material
Sic nos non nobis mellificamus apes
So we the bees make honey - but not for ourselves
On the boundaries
• A community project?• An academic research
project?• A participatory initiative?• Like oral history?• Like blogging?• Documentary?• Autobiography?• Ethnography?
Collaboration/commissions: for the Archivist • Including questions in the directives which are of interest
to researchers• Working with academics, students, the media to generate
specific kinds of material which otherwise might not exist• Charging fees where possible to support the longitudinal
nature of the project• Enabling research and public access• Taking responsibility for the long-term survival of the
project• Retaining long-term responsibility for the resulting material
What does “re-use” mean in relation to post 1981 MO activities?
Sharing & collaborationAcknowledging
Non-possessivenessRecognition of the contribution
of all the partners in the construction of the Archive
Using new MO material
• Ownership• Impact of public use on Project’s reputation• Shared authorship• Mediated relationships• Use may be secondary, multiple, concurrent or
sequential• Use may be analysis and interpretation at
different levels and within different theoretical paradigms
• Use may be for different audiences
THE CURATORSDir reply holders
ArchivistsGate keepers
LibrariansTrustees
Funding bodiesMidwivesBrokers
The Institution
THE USERSDir reply readers
ResearchersThe Academy
StudentsThe Media
The “Public”The Commissioners
THE AUTHORSDirective respondents
MO writersCorrespondents
ParticipantsSubjects
Data providersThe “Public”
Constructing the Archive