Usually when we use networks on historical correspondence archives, we’re trying to understand communication practices, or make some claims about social relations and so forth. For example a project might look at a set of centrality measures to make a claim that a particular individual was the most-connected in a given historical network, or to find people who functions as bridges between separate clusters. But often what we find in fact says more about archival practices than it does historical realities: perhaps the individual who looks the most central just seems that way because they were the most diligent about keeping on to their letters, or because they happened to keep a copy of their outgoing correspondence.
I suggest that this facet of network analysis which can be frustating can be turned around. In this paper I’m going to talk about some of the ways in which network analysis can be a useful tool in understanding archives and their collection practices themselves.