Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Different Perspectives on an Individual's Life

Electronic data

Keywords

View graph of relations

Different Perspectives on an Individual's Life: the Benefits of Comparing Sources

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Different Perspectives on an Individual's Life: the Benefits of Comparing Sources. / Pooley, Colin.
In: Local Population Studies, Vol. 111, 01.06.2024, p. 56-61.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Author

Bibtex

@article{62d037375f34481eac4bd36beef46f27,
title = "Different Perspectives on an Individual's Life: the Benefits of Comparing Sources",
abstract = "The feelings and emotions associated with events such as migration, marriage, or a birth or death in the family are hard to discern from most demographic sources. It is usually assumed that personal documents such as diaries or letters, where they exist, can shed some light on the ways in which people reacted to the life events that they experienced, and may also reveal more about the personality and character of an individual. In this short research note I demonstrate how two sets of personal documents can provide complementary information about an individual with, in this case, a series of letters providing more information about an individual{\textquoteright}s opinions and feelings than does their personal diary which, though detailed, recorded only factual information about their everyday life.",
keywords = "Diaries, Letters",
author = "Colin Pooley",
year = "2024",
month = jun,
day = "1",
language = "English",
volume = "111",
pages = "56--61",
journal = "Local Population Studies",
issn = "0143-2974",
publisher = "Local Population Studies Society",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Different Perspectives on an Individual's Life

T2 - the Benefits of Comparing Sources

AU - Pooley, Colin

PY - 2024/6/1

Y1 - 2024/6/1

N2 - The feelings and emotions associated with events such as migration, marriage, or a birth or death in the family are hard to discern from most demographic sources. It is usually assumed that personal documents such as diaries or letters, where they exist, can shed some light on the ways in which people reacted to the life events that they experienced, and may also reveal more about the personality and character of an individual. In this short research note I demonstrate how two sets of personal documents can provide complementary information about an individual with, in this case, a series of letters providing more information about an individual’s opinions and feelings than does their personal diary which, though detailed, recorded only factual information about their everyday life.

AB - The feelings and emotions associated with events such as migration, marriage, or a birth or death in the family are hard to discern from most demographic sources. It is usually assumed that personal documents such as diaries or letters, where they exist, can shed some light on the ways in which people reacted to the life events that they experienced, and may also reveal more about the personality and character of an individual. In this short research note I demonstrate how two sets of personal documents can provide complementary information about an individual with, in this case, a series of letters providing more information about an individual’s opinions and feelings than does their personal diary which, though detailed, recorded only factual information about their everyday life.

KW - Diaries

KW - Letters

M3 - Journal article

VL - 111

SP - 56

EP - 61

JO - Local Population Studies

JF - Local Population Studies

SN - 0143-2974

ER -