“The Meadow and the Archive” is a short fictional story about a government archives branch operating in a totalitarian empire in which components of the natural world have been eradicated. Archivists observe and assist a woman whom manages to liberate an important element from a particular collection. It is hoped that this element will contain the beginnings of a wilderness that the empire has systematically worked to destroy. The transaction also offers hope for other subversive modes of archival use
Our rediscovery of a seventeenth-century postmasters' trunk in the Museum voor Communicatie in The H...
As a name, “Anthropocene” would seem to signal that this geologic epoch is both because of humans an...
In 2007 I was invited by Lucy Gunning to write a chapter in the book ‘The Archive, The Event and its...
“The Meadow and the Archive” is a short fictional story about a government archives branch operating...
Archives and archival professionals suffer from what may be termed as an “image problem” due to thei...
Archives can be thought of in many different ways – they may be photos, letters, diaries, official r...
In Archive Fever, Derrida opens a critical perspective on the status of the trace as that which rema...
The archive as both plot element and narrative presentation factors significantly into the work of J...
Whether novel or mundane, for many the concept of the archive does seem to produce some kind of ‘mal...
Seedbanks, or so-called archival arks of the apocalypse, are addressing accelerating anthropocentric...
The paper “sniffs and sneaks” through the archives of Erkki Kurenniemi, elaborating on Constant’s on...
When the Historical Archive of the City of Cologne (known as Cologne’s City Archive) collapsed in 20...
The archive appears to have taken the place of historical narrative as a key locus for critical hist...
This article explores the role of archival research in understanding and generating social histories...
The 2017-2018 Editorial Collective is pleased to present the 27th volume of disClosure: A Journal of...
Our rediscovery of a seventeenth-century postmasters' trunk in the Museum voor Communicatie in The H...
As a name, “Anthropocene” would seem to signal that this geologic epoch is both because of humans an...
In 2007 I was invited by Lucy Gunning to write a chapter in the book ‘The Archive, The Event and its...
“The Meadow and the Archive” is a short fictional story about a government archives branch operating...
Archives and archival professionals suffer from what may be termed as an “image problem” due to thei...
Archives can be thought of in many different ways – they may be photos, letters, diaries, official r...
In Archive Fever, Derrida opens a critical perspective on the status of the trace as that which rema...
The archive as both plot element and narrative presentation factors significantly into the work of J...
Whether novel or mundane, for many the concept of the archive does seem to produce some kind of ‘mal...
Seedbanks, or so-called archival arks of the apocalypse, are addressing accelerating anthropocentric...
The paper “sniffs and sneaks” through the archives of Erkki Kurenniemi, elaborating on Constant’s on...
When the Historical Archive of the City of Cologne (known as Cologne’s City Archive) collapsed in 20...
The archive appears to have taken the place of historical narrative as a key locus for critical hist...
This article explores the role of archival research in understanding and generating social histories...
The 2017-2018 Editorial Collective is pleased to present the 27th volume of disClosure: A Journal of...
Our rediscovery of a seventeenth-century postmasters' trunk in the Museum voor Communicatie in The H...
As a name, “Anthropocene” would seem to signal that this geologic epoch is both because of humans an...
In 2007 I was invited by Lucy Gunning to write a chapter in the book ‘The Archive, The Event and its...