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Archival Content Analysis×Prosopography×
ÁreaHistoriographySocial History
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Ano de origem19521971
Autor originalAdapted from Berelson and Lasswell content analysis; Furet's quantitative historyLawrence Stone; Lewis Namier; Charles Beard
Tipomixed qualitative-quantitative methodqualitative-quantitative collective method
Fonte seminalFuret, F. (1971). Le quantitatif en histoire. In J. Le Goff & P. Nora (Eds.), Faire de l'histoire (Vol. 1, pp. 42-61). Gallimard. ISBN: 9782070287666Stone, L. (1971). Prosopography. Daedalus, 100(1), 46-79. link ↗
Outros nomesDocumentary Content Analysis, Archival Coding, Quantitative-Qualitative Content Analysis, Source CodingCollective Biography, Prosopography, Group Biography, Multiple Career Analysis
Relacionados44
ResumoArchival content analysis adapts the social-scientific technique of content analysis to the systematic study of historical documents held in archives. Where the impressionistic reading of sources risks privileging the vivid or the convenient, content analysis imposes an explicit, replicable procedure: a defined corpus, a coding scheme of categories, the consistent application of those categories to every document, and the analysis of the resulting frequencies and co-occurrences. Pioneered for mass communication by Bernard Berelson and Harold Lasswell, the approach was absorbed into the quantitative history championed by Francois Furet and others, who treated runs of administrative records as data to be counted and tabulated. Applied to archives, however, the method must reckon with a complication absent from designed surveys: the archive was not created to answer the historian's questions. Its categories, survivals, and silences reflect the purposes and power of the institution that produced it, so disciplined coding must be paired with critical reflection on the archive's own logic.Prosopography, or collective biography, is the investigation of the common characteristics of a defined group of historical individuals by means of a uniform set of questions, asked of every member, about their birth, family, education, wealth, careers, office-holding, and connections. Lawrence Stone, whose 1971 essay Prosopography is the field's classic methodological statement, defined it precisely as the study of a population through a collective study of their lives. Rather than writing the biography of one notable figure, the prosopographer treats many lesser-known lives as a dataset, seeking the patterns, the typical paths into an elite, the marriage strategies of a class, the recruitment of an administration, that no single biography could reveal. The method has two great traditions: the study of small, well-documented elites, exemplified by Lewis Namier's analysis of eighteenth-century members of Parliament, and the study of larger, more anonymous populations to map social structure and mobility. It transforms scattered biographical fragments into systematic knowledge of social composition and power.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Archival Content Analysis · Prosopography. Recuperado em 2026-06-24 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare