Published Works

Document Type

Book Chapter

Disciplines

Archival Science | Latin American History | Latin American Studies | Other History | Other International and Area Studies

Abstract

This chapter examines the historical antecedents of recordkeeping and archives in Puerto Rico, during both Spanish and U.S. colonial rules. It also explores the history and current issues of the Archivo General de Puerto Rico (General Archive of Puerto Rico). This historical analysis is made within the context of colonialism, examining the effects of Puerto Rico’s colonial status (during the Spanish colonial period and the current period under United States colonial management) on the mission and work of the AGPR. We argue that while the Archivo General was created to address the chaotic management of government records, its founding reflected the conflicting realities of Puerto Rico’s colonial status as a U.S. territory on the one hand, and on the other, the efforts by the new ELA government to shape a Puerto Rican identity connected to the island’s colonial past with Spain as a deterrent against U.S. assimilation.

Comments

This chapter was published in Decolonizing the Caribbean Record : An Archives Reader. Edited by Jeannette A. Bastian, Stanley H Griffin, and John A Aarons, Series on Archives, Archivists, and Society, Number Eight. Sacramento, CA: Litwin Books, 2018.

Recommended Citation

Blanco, Joel A and Marisol Ramos. "Puerto Rico’s Archival Traditions in a Colonial Context" in Decolonizing the Caribbean Record: An Archives Reader, edited by Jeannette A. Bastian, Stanley H Griffin, and John A Aarons, 55-78.Series on Archives, Archivists, and Society, Number Eight. Sacramento, CA: Litwin Books, 2018.

Share

COinS