2024-03-28T11:58:25Zhttps://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/oai/requestoai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/103042015-06-17T23:12:59Zcom_1794_7com_1794_7551com_1794_7550com_1794_988col_1794_8col_1794_10305
Wexler, Geoff B.
Long, Linda, 1956-
2010-04-07T21:54:38Z
2010-04-07T21:54:38Z
2009
The American archivist, vol. 72 (Fall/ Winter 2009) : 478–495
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/10304
18 p.
Archivists frequently collect papers from people who have had long and productive careers, but
are challenged by aging, infirmity, and the end of life. Closely related is the archivist’s work with
caregivers, survivors, and heirs. Geoff Wexler explores the often complex legal, ethical, and interpersonal
implications involved when confronting issues of aging, death, and the documentary
legacies of the departed. Linda Long provides a case study that examines an archivist’s relationship
to a terminally ill artist, Tee Corinne. An annotated bibliography concludes the article.
en_US
Archivists
Corinne, Tee, 1943-2006
Lifetimes and Legacies: Mortality, Immortality, and the Needs of Aging and Dying Donors
Mortality, Immortality, and the Needs of Aging and Dying Donors
Article