Abstract Based on the author’s experience of curating a collection of migrant community web objects within the UK Web Archive, this paper combines conceptual interrogation with empirical analysis. The central premise is that the incorporation of multilingual, diasporic micro-archives serves to queer the anglophone UK Web Archive, or “patriarchive”, by dismantling steadfast binaries and implicit postcolonial hegemonies. The article challenges Jacques Derrida’s contention that the mal d’archive is the result of the archive’s ‘troubling’ duality, and posits, on the contrary, that such boundary-crossings are the very incarnation of a positive, transgressive form of xenofeminism (XF). From the dualism at the origin of the archive itself, to that...
This paper explores gender relations on social network sites, wikis and weblogs: the gendered design...
Archiving has become an increasingly important practice in the preservation of feminist and queer hi...
Developed from their public dialogue at the Edinburgh conference ‘Cruising the Seventies: Imagining ...
Based on the author’s experience of curating a collection of migrant community web objects within th...
This paper outlines the London-French Web archiving project conducted in the framework of my doctora...
This paper proposes a multimodal ethnosemiotic conceptual framework for culturally themed selective ...
The aim of the UK Web Archive to collect and preserve the entire UK web domain ensures that it is ab...
This article analyse some features and issues of the new post-feminist semiotics related to the deve...
The French in London are a significant and still growing community. The current consular estimate of...
29 pagesThis essay, written as a collaborative process document, chronicles some of the challenges o...
This project uses the body as a framework to understand and re-imagine the archives (here referring ...
Transnational diaspora groups make intensive use of community media when communicating and connectin...
Archiving Transgender: Affects, Logics, and the Power of Queer History examines three archives that ...
Like the practices of drag itself, this workshop essay has been produced in and with community, gear...
This dissertation examines the expression of queer identity and community on the early internet and ...
This paper explores gender relations on social network sites, wikis and weblogs: the gendered design...
Archiving has become an increasingly important practice in the preservation of feminist and queer hi...
Developed from their public dialogue at the Edinburgh conference ‘Cruising the Seventies: Imagining ...
Based on the author’s experience of curating a collection of migrant community web objects within th...
This paper outlines the London-French Web archiving project conducted in the framework of my doctora...
This paper proposes a multimodal ethnosemiotic conceptual framework for culturally themed selective ...
The aim of the UK Web Archive to collect and preserve the entire UK web domain ensures that it is ab...
This article analyse some features and issues of the new post-feminist semiotics related to the deve...
The French in London are a significant and still growing community. The current consular estimate of...
29 pagesThis essay, written as a collaborative process document, chronicles some of the challenges o...
This project uses the body as a framework to understand and re-imagine the archives (here referring ...
Transnational diaspora groups make intensive use of community media when communicating and connectin...
Archiving Transgender: Affects, Logics, and the Power of Queer History examines three archives that ...
Like the practices of drag itself, this workshop essay has been produced in and with community, gear...
This dissertation examines the expression of queer identity and community on the early internet and ...
This paper explores gender relations on social network sites, wikis and weblogs: the gendered design...
Archiving has become an increasingly important practice in the preservation of feminist and queer hi...
Developed from their public dialogue at the Edinburgh conference ‘Cruising the Seventies: Imagining ...