Ghosts of Archive: Deconstructive Intersectionality and Praxis explores the relationship between archives and power to posit an archival praxis centered around justice. Drawing on his experiences working for South Africa\u27s National Archives and the Nelson Mandela Foundation, Harris shows how archives have the potential for oppression and liberation, harm and healing. His work will appeal to all readers interested in social justice
In the mid-1990s, Jacques Derrida’s book Archive Fever (1995) sparked a lively theoretical debate th...
Displaced Archives, edited by James Lowry, addresses the concept of archives that have been removed ...
Defining a Discipline: Archival Research and Practice in the Twenty-First Century reflects on the wa...
Ghosts of Archive: Deconstructive Intersectionality and Praxis.Verne Harris. London: Routledge, 2020...
Archives and Human Rights edited by Jens Boel, Perrine Canavaggio, and Antonio González Quintana uti...
In 2013, Kent State University’s Department of Special Collections and Archives launched the Black C...
Archives as memory institutions have a collective mandate to document and preserve a national cultur...
This book review analyzes two books which address archival history and practices through an internat...
The call for social justice and rise of postmodernism in the second half of the 20th century forced ...
The Social Movement Archive, written by Jen Hoyer and Nora Almeida, utilizes fifteen interviews--as ...
In Urgent Archives, Michele Caswell provides a tough love blueprint that allows archivists, in whate...
This article represents an encounter between Antje Du Bois-Pedain's recent Transitional Amnesty in S...
Through the use of feminist historiography this article examines some of the myriad ways in which fe...
Collecting Race argues that Black writers in the twentieth century theorized Black archives as new w...
This introduction defines critical archival studies and summarizes the articles including in the spe...
In the mid-1990s, Jacques Derrida’s book Archive Fever (1995) sparked a lively theoretical debate th...
Displaced Archives, edited by James Lowry, addresses the concept of archives that have been removed ...
Defining a Discipline: Archival Research and Practice in the Twenty-First Century reflects on the wa...
Ghosts of Archive: Deconstructive Intersectionality and Praxis.Verne Harris. London: Routledge, 2020...
Archives and Human Rights edited by Jens Boel, Perrine Canavaggio, and Antonio González Quintana uti...
In 2013, Kent State University’s Department of Special Collections and Archives launched the Black C...
Archives as memory institutions have a collective mandate to document and preserve a national cultur...
This book review analyzes two books which address archival history and practices through an internat...
The call for social justice and rise of postmodernism in the second half of the 20th century forced ...
The Social Movement Archive, written by Jen Hoyer and Nora Almeida, utilizes fifteen interviews--as ...
In Urgent Archives, Michele Caswell provides a tough love blueprint that allows archivists, in whate...
This article represents an encounter between Antje Du Bois-Pedain's recent Transitional Amnesty in S...
Through the use of feminist historiography this article examines some of the myriad ways in which fe...
Collecting Race argues that Black writers in the twentieth century theorized Black archives as new w...
This introduction defines critical archival studies and summarizes the articles including in the spe...
In the mid-1990s, Jacques Derrida’s book Archive Fever (1995) sparked a lively theoretical debate th...
Displaced Archives, edited by James Lowry, addresses the concept of archives that have been removed ...
Defining a Discipline: Archival Research and Practice in the Twenty-First Century reflects on the wa...