This article sketches key concerns surrounding the digital reproduction of enslaved and colonized subjects held in cultural heritage collections. It centralizes one photograph of a crying Afro-Caribbean child from St. Croix, housed in the Royal Danish Library, to demonstrate the unresolved ethical matters present in retrospective attempts to visualize colonialism. Working with affect and haunting as research material, the inquiry questions how museums and other cultural heritage institutions are caretaking historical violations, identifying themselves as hosting agents, and navigating issues of trust and accountability as they make their colonial collections available online. Speculating about what an ethics of care in representation could ...
Those working on or with colonial archives and collections face a number of challenges arising from ...
Collecting in times of crisis is a precarious task. In recent years, oral historians have considered...
In this article I examine the landscape of tribal or Indigenous archival management as it relates to...
This article sketches key concerns surrounding the digital reproduction of enslaved and colonized su...
This thesis examines how digital mediations of art and performances can contribute to shaping new me...
Following the ambitions of international and national policy makers to digitalize the cultural herit...
In the mid-1990s, Jacques Derrida’s book Archive Fever (1995) sparked a lively theoretical debate th...
This article provides a reflective overview of What Lies Unspoken: Sounding the Colonial Archive, a ...
Much has been made in recent years of the transformative potential of digital resources and historic...
This chapter examines how digital environments can enable children’s writings in museums to be “read...
2017 marks the centennial for Denmark’s sale of the colony “The Danish West Indies” to the United St...
March 31, 2017 marked the centenary of the transfer of the Danish colony—the Danish West Indies (tod...
This paper presents the aims and findings of two research projects-Rights in Records by Design and I...
This paper traces a path through post-neutrality heritage storytelling that brings together the anth...
This paper discussed issues regarding cultural property, access, the effects of colonialism on the l...
Those working on or with colonial archives and collections face a number of challenges arising from ...
Collecting in times of crisis is a precarious task. In recent years, oral historians have considered...
In this article I examine the landscape of tribal or Indigenous archival management as it relates to...
This article sketches key concerns surrounding the digital reproduction of enslaved and colonized su...
This thesis examines how digital mediations of art and performances can contribute to shaping new me...
Following the ambitions of international and national policy makers to digitalize the cultural herit...
In the mid-1990s, Jacques Derrida’s book Archive Fever (1995) sparked a lively theoretical debate th...
This article provides a reflective overview of What Lies Unspoken: Sounding the Colonial Archive, a ...
Much has been made in recent years of the transformative potential of digital resources and historic...
This chapter examines how digital environments can enable children’s writings in museums to be “read...
2017 marks the centennial for Denmark’s sale of the colony “The Danish West Indies” to the United St...
March 31, 2017 marked the centenary of the transfer of the Danish colony—the Danish West Indies (tod...
This paper presents the aims and findings of two research projects-Rights in Records by Design and I...
This paper traces a path through post-neutrality heritage storytelling that brings together the anth...
This paper discussed issues regarding cultural property, access, the effects of colonialism on the l...
Those working on or with colonial archives and collections face a number of challenges arising from ...
Collecting in times of crisis is a precarious task. In recent years, oral historians have considered...
In this article I examine the landscape of tribal or Indigenous archival management as it relates to...