This essay connects the reparative assemblages of queer archiving practice to growing conversations in university studies. Tracing the fraught legal history of Penn State University’s first “Homophile” association in the 1970s, this essay theorizes how university records—and the processes of recording they index—participate in the creation of institutional identity and help establish institutional relations with their communities. Ultimately, it suggests that archivists and librarians act as mediators, unintentionally or purposefully, of the relations between vulnerable communities and the structures of power in which they are embedded
This paper argues that home altars are archives. I consider the history of altars within Chicana com...
Scholarly conversations across disciplines have asked researchers to consider archive as a site of p...
In this paper, we present a field study that examines the development, application and maintenance o...
The purpose of this work is to recognize the lack of queer of color lens within the archival profess...
This article details the creation and development of the Oregon State University Queer Archives (OSQ...
Exploring queer archives through a variety of texts and case studies, this paper seeks to understand...
Queer federal prisoners are a population often inaccessible to queer memory due to the strong instit...
Questioning the neutrality of archives is nothing new as feminist scholars have been doing it since ...
This article traces the founding of the Lesbian Herstory Archives in the context of radical archivin...
California is home to multiple queer community archives created by community members outside of gove...
Information Studies and the humanities have different theories of the archive, causing these two fie...
Archiving Transgender: Affects, Logics, and the Power of Queer History examines three archives that ...
Archiving Transgender:Affects, Logics, and the Power of Queer History examines three archives that c...
Archival descriptive practices have traditionally obfuscated the existence of or excluded entirely t...
This article highlights the particular - embodied - ways in which the human record can be collected,...
This paper argues that home altars are archives. I consider the history of altars within Chicana com...
Scholarly conversations across disciplines have asked researchers to consider archive as a site of p...
In this paper, we present a field study that examines the development, application and maintenance o...
The purpose of this work is to recognize the lack of queer of color lens within the archival profess...
This article details the creation and development of the Oregon State University Queer Archives (OSQ...
Exploring queer archives through a variety of texts and case studies, this paper seeks to understand...
Queer federal prisoners are a population often inaccessible to queer memory due to the strong instit...
Questioning the neutrality of archives is nothing new as feminist scholars have been doing it since ...
This article traces the founding of the Lesbian Herstory Archives in the context of radical archivin...
California is home to multiple queer community archives created by community members outside of gove...
Information Studies and the humanities have different theories of the archive, causing these two fie...
Archiving Transgender: Affects, Logics, and the Power of Queer History examines three archives that ...
Archiving Transgender:Affects, Logics, and the Power of Queer History examines three archives that c...
Archival descriptive practices have traditionally obfuscated the existence of or excluded entirely t...
This article highlights the particular - embodied - ways in which the human record can be collected,...
This paper argues that home altars are archives. I consider the history of altars within Chicana com...
Scholarly conversations across disciplines have asked researchers to consider archive as a site of p...
In this paper, we present a field study that examines the development, application and maintenance o...