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    1. There seems to be littleunderstanding in the humanities that professional archivistshave master's degrees, that archival standards and bestpractices are culturally constructed artifacts, and thatbehind every act of archival practice is at least a century-old theoretical conversation. Like so many other feminizedprofessions-education and nursing are prime examples-archivists have been relegated to the realm of practice,their work deskilled, their labor devalued, their expertiseunacknowledged.

      I would be interested to read further literature discussing this phenomenon in considering archival studies. Archivists tend to lack a full form in the social consciousness in comparison to more evident professionals like nurses and educators, so while I think this observation is sound it also feels centered around academia rather than society as a whole. That said, the points about "practical professions" being feminized and having theoretical contributions undercut as a result speaks to what I view as a broader problem in academia. Fields that are fundamentally concerned with "doing a job" are seen as disconnected from the big theoretical disciplines (hard science, social science, humanities,etc.) because they arose out of specific human practices rather than branching off from those theoretical disciplines.

    1. The alleged ‘‘purity’’ of the archival fondsas an integral organic whole was increasingly challenged in working reality,however much the evidential rhetoric lingered from an earlier period.

      (I remember we only need to do one post, I'm doing an additional one because I had thoughts I wanted to express) It seems to me that the early focuses on truth, impartiality, purity, etc. especially as they relate to the history of a nation are indicative of a sort of imperialist, or just broadly nationalist approach to record keeping. The concept of a pure truth that is muddied by human inadequacies seems tied to other scientific movements of the time like eugenics. It feels like a weird comparison to make, but you see the common thread of logic drawn from evolutionary theory and various industrial philosophies: Humans are flawed, thus we must erase the fallible parts of humanity so that there is only the most rational and advantageous parts left. It's interesting to see how much archival theory was dominated by a similar approach until the material impracticality forced a change in perspective.

    2. How do we imagine ourselves? How have we imaginedourselves? What paradigm or framework should encompass and animate our ideasand work and mission as we now imagine together our archival future?

      I'm interested by this approach to archivists as a distinct community, separate from an outside world whose records they keep. I get how it works for this paper on a rhetorical level, to help talk about the field and its aims in the same way that we talk about the communities it serves, but I think it ignores the fact that archivists are also human beings that exist within other communities. You can't decontextualize an archivist from the society around them simply because they're an archivist. I don't think this is necessarily what the author is arguing, but setting up the discussion of future possibilities for the profession by framing archivists as distinct from the people they serve limits how archivists can envision themselves. If we want an actually effective paradigm or framework to consider archival work, we should try to move away from seeing The Archive as an apparatus that exists separately from the information it stores.