Introduction
Archival Sedimentation
Structure, Control, and Technology
Getting Started
`Targets′ and `Tool Kits′
Orientation Interviews
Confronting the `Black Box′ Problem
Life in the Reading Room
Strategies for Organizing Archival Data
Methodological Complexities
Publication, Citations, and Permissions
Non-Archival Data Sources
Michael R. Hill holds earned Doctorates in Geography (1982) and
Sociology (1989) from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL).
His primary interests are theories, methodologies, and
disciplinary histories. He has taught courses in geography, design
studies, landscape architecture, urban planning, and sociology
during appointments at Iowa State University, the University of
Minnesota-Duluth, Albion College, the University of Notre
Dame, and UNL. He currently edits Sociological Origins and is a
senior tutor in the UNL Department of Athletics. He is the
author, editor, and/or co-editor of 11 books, including Archival
Strategies and Techniques (SAGE, 1993); Harriet Martineau:
Methodological and Theoretical Perspectives (2001); Harriet
Martineau′s How to Observe Morals and Manners (1989); and
Harriet Martineau′s An Independent Woman′s Lake District
Writings (2004). He is helping recover the central sociological
works of Charlotte Perkins Gilman: With Her in Ourland: Sequel
to Herland (1997), The Dress of Women (2001), and Social Ethics:
Sociology and the Future of Society (2004). He recently edited
a collection of Gilman′s writings on Marriages, Families and
Children (2011). He received the American Sociological
Association′s Section on the History of Sociology Distinguished
Scholarly Career Award in 2003 and two Distinguished Scholarly
Book Awards, in 2002 and 2005, respectively.
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