Introduction: Literary Papers As the Most “Diasporic” of All Archives

Introduction: Literary Papers As the Most “Diasporic” of All Archives

Introduction: literary papers as the most “diasporic” of all archives Book or Report Section Published Version Creative Commons: Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 4.0 Open Access (2018) Introduction: literary papers as the most “diasporic” of all archives. In: Sutton, D. C. and Livingstone, A. (eds.) The Future of Literary Archives: Diasporic and Dispersed Collections at Risk. ARC, pp. 1-14. ISBN 9781942401575 Available at http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/78011/ It is advisable to refer to the publisher’s version if you intend to cite from the work. See Guidance on citing . Publisher: ARC All outputs in CentAUR are protected by Intellectual Property Rights law, including copyright law. Copyright and IPR is retained by the creators or other copyright holders. Terms and conditions for use of this material are defined in the End User Agreement . www.reading.ac.uk/centaur CentAUR Central Archive at the University of Reading Reading’s research outputs online i THE FUTURE OF LITERARY ARCHIVES ii COLLECTION DEVELOPMENT, CULTURAL HERITAGE, AND DIGITAL HUMANITIES This series publishes both monographs and edited thematic collections in the broad areas of cultural heritage, digital humanities, collecting and collections, public his- tory, and allied areas of applied humanities. In the spirit of our mission to take a stand for the humanities, this series illustrates humanities research keeping pace with technological innovation, globalization, and democratization. We value a var- iety of established, new, and diverse voices and topics in humanities research, and this series provides a platform for publishing the results of cutting-edge projects within these ields. The aim is to illustrate the impact of humanities research and in particular relect the exciting new networks developing between researchers and the cultural sector, including archives, libraries and museums, media and the arts, cultural memory and heritage institutions, festivals and tourism, and public history. Acquisitions Editor Danièle Cybulskie FOR PRIVATE AND Evaluation and Peer ReviewNON-COMMERCIAL USE ONLY The press has every proposal independently evaluated by expert reviews before any formal commitment is made by the press to the author. Further, all submitted manuscripts are subject to peer review by an expert chosen by the press. iii THE FUTURE OF LITERARY ARCHIVES: DIASPORIC AND DISPERSED COLLECTIONS AT RISK Edited by DAVID C. SUTTON with ANN LIVINGSTONE iv British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library © 2018, Arc Humanities Press, Leeds This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial- NoDerivatives 4.0 International Licence. The author asserts their moral right to be identiied as the author of their part of this work. Permission to use brief excerpts from this work in scholarly and educational works is hereby granted provided that the source is acknowledged. Any use of material in this work that is an exception or limitation covered by Article 5 of the European Union’s Copyright Directive (2001/29/EC) or would be determined to be “fair use” under Section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Act September 2010 Page 2 or that satisies the conditions speciied in Section 108 of the U.S. Copyright Act (17 USC §108, as revised by P.L. 94–553) does not require the Publisher’s permission. ISBN: 9781942401575 FOR PRIVATE AND e- ISBN: 9781942401582 NON-COMMERCIAL USE ONLY https://arc-humanities.org Printed and bound by CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon, CR0 4YY 1 INTRODUCTION: LITERARY PAPERS AS THE MOST “DIASPORIC” OF ALL ARCHIVES DAVID C. SUTTON The essays collected in this book all derive or continue from the recent work of the Diasporic Literary Archives Network and illustrate the innovative and exciting range of programmes and actions which it generated. The Network was conceived and planned by a team of archivists, researchers and scholars in the University of Reading during 2010– 2011, and came into existence on January 1, 2012, funded by a generous grant from the Leverhulme Trust. Although the Leverhulme Trust’s inancial support came to an end in 2015, the Network has continued many of its projects and activities in the subsequent years and retains a clear identity through ongoing cooperation between its members and through regular updating of its website. From the beginning, the Network proposed to take a comparative, transnational and internationalist approach to studying literary manuscripts, their uses and their signiicance. It took as its prime starting point the notion that literary archives differ from most other types of archival papers in that their locations are more diverse and dificult to predict; they may have a higher inancial value which will lead to their more frequently being purchased— as opposed to being deposited or donated; and acquiring institutions for literary papers have historically had very little by way of collecting policies. Consequently, the collecting of literary papers has often been opportunistic, unexplained and serendipitous. The irst points of comparison for this deining view of the unpredictable mobility of literary papers were the existing sections and the proposed future sections within the International Council on Archives. Using these benchmarks, assessments could be made in contrast with national and regional oficial papers; archives of local, municipal and territorial government; architectural archives; reli- gious and faith tradition archives; archives of sports and games; political, business, and trade union archives; archives of educational institutions, hospitals, prisons, museums, and palaces; legal, notarial, and judicial papers; parliamentary and pol- itical papers; and the archives of international organizations. The comparisons 2 2 DAVID C. SUTTON conirmed that no category of archival material was more subject to uncertainty of location and to haphazardness of acquisition. The question of how to deine “literary” for these archival purposes preoccu- pied the Network much less than it had preoccupied predecessor projects. There was an early working consensus that our subject was the archival manuscripts, cor- respondence, and personal papers of poets, novelists, dramatists, literary essayists and critics, men and women of letters, biographers, and autobiographers. Our def- inition would not include journalists, theologians, philosophers, or politicians (even when, like Bertrand Russell or Winston Churchill, they had been awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature). The calm ease with which our set of deinitions was deemed to be internationally acceptable contrasted with the reception accorded the Location Register of Twentieth- Century English Literary Manuscripts and Letters in the late 1980s and some of the distinctly bizarre criticism the Register received at that time: Sir, The correspondence about John Meade Falkner prompts me to note that the 100 volumes of Bishop Hensley Henson’s journals, in the Dean and Chapter Library at Durham, are not listed in the Register . Was an atheist in charge? Charles Welldon, Hazlemere Letter to the London Review of Books , September 14, 1989 *** The choice of the dramatic term “diasporic” was a deining moment in the life- story of the Network. The established literature of racial, tribal, and national diasporas provided a philosophical framework which gave a highly original set of points of reference for the study of literary archives. Concepts such as the natural home, the appropriate location, exile, dissidence, fugitive existence, cultural hegemony, patri- mony, heritage, and economic migration were deployed to provide new perspectives. The essential nature of literary manuscripts was scrutinized and certain key features proposed and reviewed. Early conclusions about this essential nature stressed the differentness of literary papers, and the vital importance of form as well as content: Literary manuscripts are not like other archives. Their importance lies in who made them and how they were made, the unique relationship between author and evolving text, the insights they give into the act of creation. The supreme example of this magical combination of form and content is provided by the manuscriptsFOR of PRIVATE Marcel Proust, AND lovingly preserved in the Bibliothèque Nationale deNON-COMMERCIAL France, 171 volumes of cross- hatched text, with later additions on small pieces USEof paper— ONLY the famous paperoles — glued onto almost every page: a wonderfully dreadful conservation challenge. Literary archives often have a higher inancial value than other archives. They are more likely to be found in libraries than in archives ofices. In many countries of the world literary archives are housed in private foundations (such as the Fundação Casa de Rui Barbosa in Rio de Janeiro), in literary 3 LITERARY PAPERS AS THE MOST “DIASPORIC” OF ALL ARCHIVES 3 museums (such as the Museum of Japanese Modern Literature in Meguro- ku, Tokyo), or in literary houses (such as the Maison de Balzac in Paris). In countries such as the USA, Canada and the UK, university libraries play a leading role, but this is by no means true in all countries. In France, for example, public libraries (often in the author’s home town) are the prin- cipal repositories, together with the Bibliothèque Nationale. In contrast with most other types of archives―business archives, medical archives, architec- tural archives, religious archives or municipal archives―literary archives are often scattered in diverse locations without any sense

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