{"title":"归档“杀人癖”的伦理:泰德·卡钦斯基的论文","authors":"N. Devlin","doi":"10.3172/JIE.19.1.126","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"To collect only the pleasant, the democratic, the pleasing records that document our past-the aspects of American life that make us all proud-would be so simple. However, this is not life-nor should it be-and these types of records do not give a complete picture of our culture and our history. These were the thoughts of Julie Herrada, the then Assistant Curator of the Labadie Collection at the University of Michigan, when she wrote to Ted Kaczynski in 1997 requesting all of his personal writings and materials that he had in his possession. The papers that Kaczynski eventually sent to Herrada were housed in the Labadie Collection, an archive that had long made it its mission to document the radical and social protest movements in American history, acquiring materials on antiwar, transgender, anarchist, and alternative sexuality movements (none of which would be considered mainstream). Concerns over controversial acquisitions, media interference, third-party privacy rights, and donor requests all played a significant part in Herrada's experience, and add an invaluable dimension as a case study to any further discussion of such issues.The University of Michigan and the Ted Kaczynski Papers, 1997-1999Ted Kaczynski was arrested in 1996 on charges of being the notorious \"Unabomber\" for two decades. During his violent campaign he mailed bombs to individuals involved in fields related to science, genetic engineering, forestry, airlines, and universities. Before his arrest in 1996, three people were killed and twenty-four were injured (Herrada, 2003-2004, p. 35). Kaczynski was captured in 1996, and after a long trial, pleaded guilty on January 22, 1998. He was sentenced to four life sentences plus 30 years in prison (D. Johnson, 1998). Kaczynski later tried to withdraw his guilty plea, arguing that he was coerced into the plea agreement, but his appeal was denied (Egelko, 2001).So how did Julie Herrada come to acquire the unusual collection of correspondence that Kaczynski had in his jail cell in Colorado? Soon after Kaczynski's arrest, Herrada saw the potential for scholarly research that his radical writings might hold. In 1997 she wrote to Kaczynski's attorney and basically asked for all his writings (Dodge, 2005). At the time she contacted him, Kaczynski was part of a media frenzy. His writings and crimes had garnered the public's continuing, morbid fascination. Herrada pointed out in an interview for Library Journal that her job involved keeping track of events followed in the radical press and collecting new materials accordingly (Library Journal, 2002). Noting the increasing interest of the radical and anarchist press in his writings, she indicated that she could not ignore the opportunity.Four months after writing to Kaczynski's attorney (Judy Clarke), she received word that he was interested and wanted information on the library and its mission. Soon after, Kaczynski sent all the correspondence that he had written and received since his arrest (Herrada, 2003-2004, p. 38). After that, papers started arriving every 6 to 8 weeks (K. Johnson, 2001). Kaczynski sent the correspondence before any deed of gift was signed-he was only allowed to keep a small portion of letters in his cell, and fearing their destruction, sent them to Herrada (Herrada, 2003-2004, p. 38).The first ethical issue in this acquisition was the validity of the acquisition itself. Herrada's accession of this collection was directly in line with the Society of American Archivists' Code of Ethics' statements on collecting policies (as it existed at the time). According to Section III of the Code (Collecting Policies), \"acquisitions should be made in accordance with a written policy statement ... and consistent with the mission of the archives\" (The Society of American Archivists, 1992, Section III). The collection must be within the collecting scope, and not acquired for any other reason. While Kaczynski was obviously a well-known and controversial figure, it was not his fame or the potential media attention that the institution would garner that interested Herrada. …","PeriodicalId":39913,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Information Ethics","volume":"19 1","pages":"126-140"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2010-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"4","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Ethics of Archiving \\\"Murderabilia\\\": The Papers of Ted Kaczynski\",\"authors\":\"N. Devlin\",\"doi\":\"10.3172/JIE.19.1.126\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"To collect only the pleasant, the democratic, the pleasing records that document our past-the aspects of American life that make us all proud-would be so simple. However, this is not life-nor should it be-and these types of records do not give a complete picture of our culture and our history. These were the thoughts of Julie Herrada, the then Assistant Curator of the Labadie Collection at the University of Michigan, when she wrote to Ted Kaczynski in 1997 requesting all of his personal writings and materials that he had in his possession. The papers that Kaczynski eventually sent to Herrada were housed in the Labadie Collection, an archive that had long made it its mission to document the radical and social protest movements in American history, acquiring materials on antiwar, transgender, anarchist, and alternative sexuality movements (none of which would be considered mainstream). Concerns over controversial acquisitions, media interference, third-party privacy rights, and donor requests all played a significant part in Herrada's experience, and add an invaluable dimension as a case study to any further discussion of such issues.The University of Michigan and the Ted Kaczynski Papers, 1997-1999Ted Kaczynski was arrested in 1996 on charges of being the notorious \\\"Unabomber\\\" for two decades. During his violent campaign he mailed bombs to individuals involved in fields related to science, genetic engineering, forestry, airlines, and universities. Before his arrest in 1996, three people were killed and twenty-four were injured (Herrada, 2003-2004, p. 35). Kaczynski was captured in 1996, and after a long trial, pleaded guilty on January 22, 1998. He was sentenced to four life sentences plus 30 years in prison (D. Johnson, 1998). Kaczynski later tried to withdraw his guilty plea, arguing that he was coerced into the plea agreement, but his appeal was denied (Egelko, 2001).So how did Julie Herrada come to acquire the unusual collection of correspondence that Kaczynski had in his jail cell in Colorado? Soon after Kaczynski's arrest, Herrada saw the potential for scholarly research that his radical writings might hold. In 1997 she wrote to Kaczynski's attorney and basically asked for all his writings (Dodge, 2005). At the time she contacted him, Kaczynski was part of a media frenzy. His writings and crimes had garnered the public's continuing, morbid fascination. Herrada pointed out in an interview for Library Journal that her job involved keeping track of events followed in the radical press and collecting new materials accordingly (Library Journal, 2002). Noting the increasing interest of the radical and anarchist press in his writings, she indicated that she could not ignore the opportunity.Four months after writing to Kaczynski's attorney (Judy Clarke), she received word that he was interested and wanted information on the library and its mission. Soon after, Kaczynski sent all the correspondence that he had written and received since his arrest (Herrada, 2003-2004, p. 38). After that, papers started arriving every 6 to 8 weeks (K. Johnson, 2001). Kaczynski sent the correspondence before any deed of gift was signed-he was only allowed to keep a small portion of letters in his cell, and fearing their destruction, sent them to Herrada (Herrada, 2003-2004, p. 38).The first ethical issue in this acquisition was the validity of the acquisition itself. Herrada's accession of this collection was directly in line with the Society of American Archivists' Code of Ethics' statements on collecting policies (as it existed at the time). According to Section III of the Code (Collecting Policies), \\\"acquisitions should be made in accordance with a written policy statement ... and consistent with the mission of the archives\\\" (The Society of American Archivists, 1992, Section III). The collection must be within the collecting scope, and not acquired for any other reason. While Kaczynski was obviously a well-known and controversial figure, it was not his fame or the potential media attention that the institution would garner that interested Herrada. …\",\"PeriodicalId\":39913,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of Information Ethics\",\"volume\":\"19 1\",\"pages\":\"126-140\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2010-04-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"4\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of Information Ethics\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.3172/JIE.19.1.126\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q2\",\"JCRName\":\"Arts and Humanities\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Information Ethics","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3172/JIE.19.1.126","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 4
摘要
只收集那些令人愉快的、民主的、令人愉快的记录,这些记录记录了我们的过去——让我们所有人感到自豪的美国生活的方方面面——将是如此简单。然而,这不是生活,也不应该是生活,这些类型的记录并不能完整地反映我们的文化和历史。这是Julie Herrada的想法,她当时是密歇根大学Labadie收藏的助理馆长,1997年她写信给Ted Kaczynski,要求他提供他所有的个人作品和材料。卡钦斯基最终寄给赫拉达的文件被收藏在拉巴迪收藏馆(Labadie Collection)中,这个档案馆长期以来一直以记录美国历史上的激进和社会抗议运动为使命,收集了反战、跨性别、无政府主义和另类性运动的材料(这些都不被认为是主流)。对有争议的收购、媒体干预、第三方隐私权和捐助者要求的担忧都在Herrada的经历中发挥了重要作用,并为进一步讨论此类问题增加了一个宝贵的案例研究维度。1996年,泰德·卡钦斯基因被指控为臭名昭著的“炸弹客”二十年而被捕。在他的暴力竞选中,他向科学、基因工程、林业、航空和大学等领域的人士邮寄炸弹。在他1996年被捕之前,有3人被杀,24人受伤(Herrada, 2003-2004年,第35页)。卡钦斯基于1996年被捕,经过长时间的审判,于1998年1月22日认罪。他被判处四次无期徒刑外加30年监禁(D. Johnson, 1998)。卡钦斯基后来试图撤回他的认罪,辩称他是被迫进入认罪协议,但他的上诉被拒绝(Egelko, 2001)。那么,Julie Herrada是如何获得卡钦斯基在科罗拉多州监狱牢房里不寻常的信件收集的呢?卡钦斯基被捕后不久,Herrada看到了他的激进著作在学术研究方面的潜力。1997年,她写信给卡钦斯基的律师,基本上要求他的所有作品(道奇,2005)。她联系卡钦斯基的时候,卡钦斯基是媒体狂热的一部分。他的作品和罪行吸引了公众持续的、病态的迷恋。Herrada在接受《图书馆杂志》采访时指出,她的工作包括跟踪激进媒体所关注的事件,并相应地收集新材料(图书馆杂志,2002)。她注意到激进和无政府主义媒体对他的作品越来越感兴趣,并表示她不能忽视这个机会。在给卡钦斯基的律师(朱迪·克拉克饰)写信四个月后,她得到消息,卡钦斯基很感兴趣,想要了解图书馆及其使命的信息。不久之后,卡钦斯基发出了他被捕以来所写和收到的所有信件(Herrada, 2003-2004, p. 38)。在那之后,论文开始每6到8周到达一次(K. Johnson, 2001)。卡钦斯基在签署任何赠与契约之前就发送了这些信件——他只被允许在他的牢房里保存一小部分信件,由于担心信件被破坏,他把它们寄给了Herrada (Herrada, 2003-2004, p. 38)。这次收购的第一个伦理问题是收购本身的有效性。Herrada对这些藏品的加入直接符合美国档案工作者协会关于收集政策的道德准则声明(当时存在)。根据守则第III条(征收政策),“应按照书面政策声明进行征收……并且符合档案馆的使命”(the Society of American Archivists, 1992, Section III)。藏品必须在收藏范围内,不得因其他任何原因获得。虽然卡钦斯基显然是一个知名而有争议的人物,但他的名声或潜在的媒体关注并没有引起Herrada的兴趣。…
The Ethics of Archiving "Murderabilia": The Papers of Ted Kaczynski
To collect only the pleasant, the democratic, the pleasing records that document our past-the aspects of American life that make us all proud-would be so simple. However, this is not life-nor should it be-and these types of records do not give a complete picture of our culture and our history. These were the thoughts of Julie Herrada, the then Assistant Curator of the Labadie Collection at the University of Michigan, when she wrote to Ted Kaczynski in 1997 requesting all of his personal writings and materials that he had in his possession. The papers that Kaczynski eventually sent to Herrada were housed in the Labadie Collection, an archive that had long made it its mission to document the radical and social protest movements in American history, acquiring materials on antiwar, transgender, anarchist, and alternative sexuality movements (none of which would be considered mainstream). Concerns over controversial acquisitions, media interference, third-party privacy rights, and donor requests all played a significant part in Herrada's experience, and add an invaluable dimension as a case study to any further discussion of such issues.The University of Michigan and the Ted Kaczynski Papers, 1997-1999Ted Kaczynski was arrested in 1996 on charges of being the notorious "Unabomber" for two decades. During his violent campaign he mailed bombs to individuals involved in fields related to science, genetic engineering, forestry, airlines, and universities. Before his arrest in 1996, three people were killed and twenty-four were injured (Herrada, 2003-2004, p. 35). Kaczynski was captured in 1996, and after a long trial, pleaded guilty on January 22, 1998. He was sentenced to four life sentences plus 30 years in prison (D. Johnson, 1998). Kaczynski later tried to withdraw his guilty plea, arguing that he was coerced into the plea agreement, but his appeal was denied (Egelko, 2001).So how did Julie Herrada come to acquire the unusual collection of correspondence that Kaczynski had in his jail cell in Colorado? Soon after Kaczynski's arrest, Herrada saw the potential for scholarly research that his radical writings might hold. In 1997 she wrote to Kaczynski's attorney and basically asked for all his writings (Dodge, 2005). At the time she contacted him, Kaczynski was part of a media frenzy. His writings and crimes had garnered the public's continuing, morbid fascination. Herrada pointed out in an interview for Library Journal that her job involved keeping track of events followed in the radical press and collecting new materials accordingly (Library Journal, 2002). Noting the increasing interest of the radical and anarchist press in his writings, she indicated that she could not ignore the opportunity.Four months after writing to Kaczynski's attorney (Judy Clarke), she received word that he was interested and wanted information on the library and its mission. Soon after, Kaczynski sent all the correspondence that he had written and received since his arrest (Herrada, 2003-2004, p. 38). After that, papers started arriving every 6 to 8 weeks (K. Johnson, 2001). Kaczynski sent the correspondence before any deed of gift was signed-he was only allowed to keep a small portion of letters in his cell, and fearing their destruction, sent them to Herrada (Herrada, 2003-2004, p. 38).The first ethical issue in this acquisition was the validity of the acquisition itself. Herrada's accession of this collection was directly in line with the Society of American Archivists' Code of Ethics' statements on collecting policies (as it existed at the time). According to Section III of the Code (Collecting Policies), "acquisitions should be made in accordance with a written policy statement ... and consistent with the mission of the archives" (The Society of American Archivists, 1992, Section III). The collection must be within the collecting scope, and not acquired for any other reason. While Kaczynski was obviously a well-known and controversial figure, it was not his fame or the potential media attention that the institution would garner that interested Herrada. …