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February 28, 2023

Paper Cadavers? Archival Powers till the Digital Age 2022/23 Fall

INSTRUCTOR

Ioana Macrea-Toma

COURSE DESCRIPTION

This course investigates the genealogies of the archives’ powers from their inception as state building projects to their metamorphosis into counter-sites of opposing authoritarian power and politics. The course analyzes through certain key case studies ranging from 19th century archives to secret police, counterinsurgency, colonial and identity archives, the changing interaction between influential documentary practices, (counter-)state politics and history writing. So, instead of offering an “evolutionary” history of archives from the paper age to the digital age, the course offers an insight into what made archives important and relevant in the first place, in order to understand the challenges associated with the digital platforms nowadays. In times when “the paper” and “the digital” are still coexisting due to infrastructural, political and socio-economic disparities, and the “context” of an item is difficult to assess within the flattening ecologies of the digital platforms, it is important to also rethink the relationship between the physical records and the digital ones. The course studies archives as objects and the objects within them, so it is useful for both public historians interested in public institutions of memory and historical cultural data (in general) as well as for historians who would like to more comprehensively understand the relationship between “sources,” their biases and historical problems.

It investigates, for example, how the current ‘information overload” is the byproduct of a relative recent drive of comprehensive record-keeping which eventually turned on its head the relationship between phenomena and evidence (from “what is in the archive is the arbitrary trace of what happened” to “if there is is no evidence, there is no phenomena”). The current production of evidence by the construction of paper or digital “counter-archives” is thus aiming to recuperate or construct marginal, subversive or invisible phenomena. Archives have therefore become consubstantial to new political and identitarian movements which are opposed to the states or imperial powers and they are crucial for the work and analyses of the [public] historian. 

The challenges for the future [public] historian would be complex. On the one hand, he/she would have to know the general challenges that archives face (with regards to what to select, how to preserve and how to make accessible documents – online or not – from the past for increasingly broader and distant publics). On the other, he/she will deal with the ethical, professional and political aspects of any historical intervention in the public realm. The course therefore combines insights from media archeology, archival ethnography, history of law and historiography in order to address current questions about the interventionist (and yet truthful) powers of archives in the public realm.

LIST OF CLASSES:
The Enchantment with the Archive; the organic idea of historical memory

The Bureaucracy of Annihilation

Counter-archives: Collecting and the Control of Knowledge

Archiving as Labor and Intervention: Junk Materials online

Converting Archives of Oppression into Records of Truth and Justice

Too Much Digital Impetus? Three Important Cautionary Tales

February 28, 2023