The affective dimension of archival work: understanding the thoughts and feelings of archivists who documented the HIV/AIDS epidemic

Introduction. Affect is a vehicle of meaning-making that helps individuals adapt to stressful conditions. Affective experiences help meaning-making during life transitions and crises, but less is known about the affective experiences of information professionals, such as archivists. Method. Empl...

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Main Authors: Allan A. Martell, Travis L. Wagner, Shannon Oltmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Borås 2025-03-01
Series:Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
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Online Access:https://publicera.kb.se/ir/article/view/47341
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author Allan A. Martell
Travis L. Wagner
Shannon Oltmann
author_facet Allan A. Martell
Travis L. Wagner
Shannon Oltmann
author_sort Allan A. Martell
collection DOAJ
description Introduction. Affect is a vehicle of meaning-making that helps individuals adapt to stressful conditions. Affective experiences help meaning-making during life transitions and crises, but less is known about the affective experiences of information professionals, such as archivists. Method. Employing a qualitative research approach, we conducted 25 semi-structured interviews with archivists working in LGBTQIA+ archives across the United States. We asked about participants’ thoughts and feelings about their work documenting the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the United States. Analysis. Our emerging findings are based on an analysis of the first 10 interviews of our dataset. Our data analysis relied on inductive and deductive coding, concept mapping, and memo writing. Results. Archivists who documented this epidemic had to interact with vast amounts of information about loss and grief. Our participants experienced a physical toll due to this, reflected upon the impact of the epidemic on the LBTQIA+ community, and felt a range of negative and positive affects. Conclusions. Archivists' affective experiences are more complex than just burnout. Our preliminary findings suggest that the affective experiences of archivists documenting trauma and crises may not only lead to burnout but also to experience appreciation for the role of solidarity and the positive impact of documentation on the LGBTIA+ community.
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spelling doaj-art-08a14d4d9f1f4c19a03a2d595dfa31692025-08-20T02:48:12ZengUniversity of BoråsInformation Research: An International Electronic Journal1368-16132025-03-0130iConf10.47989/ir30iConf47341The affective dimension of archival work: understanding the thoughts and feelings of archivists who documented the HIV/AIDS epidemicAllan A. Martell0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7768-7822Travis L. Wagner1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6000-157XShannon Oltmann2https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1142-3327Indiana University Bloomington, United States of AmericaUniversity of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, United States of AmericaUniversity of Kentucky, United States of America Introduction. Affect is a vehicle of meaning-making that helps individuals adapt to stressful conditions. Affective experiences help meaning-making during life transitions and crises, but less is known about the affective experiences of information professionals, such as archivists. Method. Employing a qualitative research approach, we conducted 25 semi-structured interviews with archivists working in LGBTQIA+ archives across the United States. We asked about participants’ thoughts and feelings about their work documenting the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the United States. Analysis. Our emerging findings are based on an analysis of the first 10 interviews of our dataset. Our data analysis relied on inductive and deductive coding, concept mapping, and memo writing. Results. Archivists who documented this epidemic had to interact with vast amounts of information about loss and grief. Our participants experienced a physical toll due to this, reflected upon the impact of the epidemic on the LBTQIA+ community, and felt a range of negative and positive affects. Conclusions. Archivists' affective experiences are more complex than just burnout. Our preliminary findings suggest that the affective experiences of archivists documenting trauma and crises may not only lead to burnout but also to experience appreciation for the role of solidarity and the positive impact of documentation on the LGBTIA+ community. https://publicera.kb.se/ir/article/view/47341LGBTQIA+ archivesHIV/AIDSmeaning-makingaffect
spellingShingle Allan A. Martell
Travis L. Wagner
Shannon Oltmann
The affective dimension of archival work: understanding the thoughts and feelings of archivists who documented the HIV/AIDS epidemic
Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
LGBTQIA+ archives
HIV/AIDS
meaning-making
affect
title The affective dimension of archival work: understanding the thoughts and feelings of archivists who documented the HIV/AIDS epidemic
title_full The affective dimension of archival work: understanding the thoughts and feelings of archivists who documented the HIV/AIDS epidemic
title_fullStr The affective dimension of archival work: understanding the thoughts and feelings of archivists who documented the HIV/AIDS epidemic
title_full_unstemmed The affective dimension of archival work: understanding the thoughts and feelings of archivists who documented the HIV/AIDS epidemic
title_short The affective dimension of archival work: understanding the thoughts and feelings of archivists who documented the HIV/AIDS epidemic
title_sort affective dimension of archival work understanding the thoughts and feelings of archivists who documented the hiv aids epidemic
topic LGBTQIA+ archives
HIV/AIDS
meaning-making
affect
url https://publicera.kb.se/ir/article/view/47341
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