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History of Business, 1971

A Guide to the Collection of Oral History Interviews at Indiana University Bloomington

Finding aid prepared by the staff of the Center for the Study of History and Memory with a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities Division of Preservation and Access, 2000-2002

Overview of the Collection

Repository
Indiana University Center for Documentary Research and Practice
Indiana University
Franklin Hall 0030B
601 E. Kirkwood Avenue
Bloomington, IN 47405
Phone: 812/855-2856
Fax: 812/855-0002
E-mail: ohrc@indiana.edu
https://cdrp.mediaschool.indiana.edu

Creator
Indiana University Center for the Study of History and Memory

Title
History of Business, 1971

Project No.
ohrc046

Interviews
1 interview. Audiotapes, transcripts, and collateral materials.

Physical Location
Interviews are housed in Franklin Hall, Room 0030B. Copies of interview transcripts are also held by the IU Libraries University Archives. Contact archives@indiana.edu for more information. For other locations housing the interviews from this project, please contact the Center for Documentary Research and Practice office.

Language
Materials are in English

Abstract
The history of business can be studied from a variety of angles. These approaches are discussed by the interviewee in terms of business methodology. Different areas of historical study interconnected with that of business are also explored. Books and authors demonstrating the points are shared and problems with the study of new history are also examined.

Scope and Content Note

This collection contains one interview conducted in 1971. The interview is one hour and consists of an audio tape, a typed transcript, and collateral materials.

Administrative Information

Acquisition Information
Oral history interviews conducted by the Indiana University Center for the Study of History and Memory from 1968 to the present, with particular focus on the history of twentieth-century America and the Midwest.
Usage Restrictions
The archive of the Center for Documentary Research and Practice at Indiana University is open to the use of researchers. Copies of transcript pages are available only when such copies are permitted by the deed of gift. Scholars must honor any restrictions the interviewee placed on the use of the interview. Since some of our earlier (pre-computer) transcripts do not exist in final form, any editing marks in a transcript (deletions, additions, corrections) are to be quoted as marked. Audio files may not be copied for patrons unless the deed of gift permits it, and a transcript is unavailable for that interview. The same rules of use that apply to a transcript apply to the audio interview. Interviews may not be reproduced in full for any public use, but excerpted quotes may be used as long as researchers fully cite the data in their research, including accession number, interview date, interviewee's and interviewer's name, and page(s).
Preferred Citation
[interviewee first name last name] interview, by [interviewer first name last name], [interview date(s)], [call number], [project name], Center for Documentary Research and Practice, Indiana University, Bloomington, [page number(s) or tape number and side if no transcript; if digital audio and no transcript, cite time when quote occurs].

Interview List


Interviewee
Baughman, James May 1971 

Call Number
71-020

Physical Description

25 pages, 1 tape, 3 3/4 ips, 1 hour; name index; photograph of interviewee, biographical data of interviewee

Interviewer
Madison, James H.

Access Status

Open

Scope and Content Note

James Baughman, born on August 8, 1936, discusses the history of business and how it is studied. He discusses business methodology in the forms of administrative history and biographical (business) history, among others. He talks about the concept of business in history as opposed to the history of business, which entails how business has effected society throughout history and includes such areas of study as economic history and statistics. Baughman discusses the problems that general historians have with these emerging methods of studying history. He argues that in order to have a serious study of any particular area of history, one must first understand the fields in relation to it. He mentions authors in each of the methods he describes and considers Strategy and Structure by Alfred D. Chandler, Jr. the most effective text for students of the history of business.

  • Keywords
    • Corporation Names
    • Harvard Business School
    • Occupation Names
    • business history professor
    • university administrator of research
    • Personal Names
    • Chandler, Alfred D., Jr.
    • Subjects
    • administrative history
    • biographical history
    • business in history
    • business methodology
    • economic history
    • research statistics
    • Strategy and Structure

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