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Archiving the COVID-19 pandemic in Mass Observation and Middletown

Archiving the COVID-19 pandemic in Mass Observation and Middletown
Archiving the COVID-19 pandemic in Mass Observation and Middletown

The COVID-19 pandemic generated debates about how pandemics should be known. There was much discussion of what role the human sciences could play in knowing – and governing – the pandemic. In this article, we focus on attempts to know the pandemic through diaries, other biographical writing, and related forms like mass photography. In particular, we focus on the archiving of such forms by Mass Observation in the UK and the Everyday Life in Middletown (EDLM) project in the USA, and initial analyses of such material by scholars from across the human sciences. Our main argument is that archiving the pandemic was informed by, and needs viewing through, the history of the human sciences – including the distinctive histories and human sciences of Mass Observation and Middletown. The article finishes by introducing a Special Section that engages with archiving the pandemic in two senses: the archiving of diaries and related forms by Mass Observation and the EDLM project, and the archiving of initial encounters between researchers and this material by History of the Human Sciences. The Special Section seeks to know the pandemic from the human sciences in the present and to archive knowing the pandemic from the human sciences for the future.

COVID-19 pandemic, Mass Observation, Middletown, archive, diaries
0952-6951
3-25
Clarke, Nicholas
4ed65752-5210-4f9e-aeff-9188520510e8
Barnett, Clive
b1f2f557-2f7b-4c99-8aec-0b37a57db0c8
Clarke, Nicholas
4ed65752-5210-4f9e-aeff-9188520510e8
Barnett, Clive
b1f2f557-2f7b-4c99-8aec-0b37a57db0c8

Clarke, Nicholas and Barnett, Clive (2023) Archiving the COVID-19 pandemic in Mass Observation and Middletown. History of the Human Sciences, 36 (2), 3-25. (doi:10.1177/09526951231152139).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic generated debates about how pandemics should be known. There was much discussion of what role the human sciences could play in knowing – and governing – the pandemic. In this article, we focus on attempts to know the pandemic through diaries, other biographical writing, and related forms like mass photography. In particular, we focus on the archiving of such forms by Mass Observation in the UK and the Everyday Life in Middletown (EDLM) project in the USA, and initial analyses of such material by scholars from across the human sciences. Our main argument is that archiving the pandemic was informed by, and needs viewing through, the history of the human sciences – including the distinctive histories and human sciences of Mass Observation and Middletown. The article finishes by introducing a Special Section that engages with archiving the pandemic in two senses: the archiving of diaries and related forms by Mass Observation and the EDLM project, and the archiving of initial encounters between researchers and this material by History of the Human Sciences. The Special Section seeks to know the pandemic from the human sciences in the present and to archive knowing the pandemic from the human sciences for the future.

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09526951231152139
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
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Published date: 30 April 2023
Additional Information: © The Author(s) 2023.
Keywords: COVID-19 pandemic, Mass Observation, Middletown, archive, diaries

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 476973
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/476973
ISSN: 0952-6951
PURE UUID: b8c47b51-332b-48f2-bde8-a601c6141856
ORCID for Nicholas Clarke: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9148-9849

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Date deposited: 22 May 2023 17:11
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:03

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Contributors

Author: Nicholas Clarke ORCID iD
Author: Clive Barnett

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