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E-grāmata: Materiality of the Archive: Creative Practice in Context

Edited by (British Film Institute, UK), Edited by (University of Brighton, UK)
  • Formāts: 336 pages
  • Sērija : Routledge Studies in Archives
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Oct-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780429553080
  • Formāts - PDF+DRM
  • Cena: 43,95 €*
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  • Formāts: 336 pages
  • Sērija : Routledge Studies in Archives
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Oct-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780429553080

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"The Materiality of the Archive is the first volume to bring together a range of methodological approaches to the materiality of archives, as a framework for their engagement, analysis and interpretation. Focusing on the archives of creative practices, the book reaches between and across existing bodies of knowledge in this field, including material culture, art history and literary studies, unified by an interest in archives as material deposits and aggregations, in both analogue and digital forms, as well as the material encounter. Connecting a breadth of disciplinary interests in the archive with expanding discourses in materiality, contributors address the potential of a material engagement to animate archival content. Analysing the systems, processes and actions that constitute the shapes, forms and structures in which individual archival objects accumulate, and the underpinnings which may hold them in place as an archival body, the book considers ways in which the inexorable move to the digital affects traditional theories of the physical archival object. It also considers how stewardship practices such as description and metadata creation can accommodate these changes. The Materiality of the Archive unifies theory and practice and brings together professional and academic perspectives. The book is essential reading for academics, researchers and postgraduate students working in the fields of archive studies, museology, art history and material culture"--

The Materiality of the Archive

is the first volume to bring together a range of methodological approaches to the materiality of archives, as a framework for their engagement, analysis and interpretation.



The Materiality of the Archive

is the first volume to bring together a range of methodological approaches to the materiality of archives, as a framework for their engagement, analysis and interpretation.

Focusing on the archives of creative practices, the book reaches between and across existing bodies of knowledge in this field, including material culture, art history and literary studies, unified by an interest in archives as material deposits and aggregations, in both analogue and digital forms, as well as the material encounter. Connecting a breadth of disciplinary interests in the archive with expanding discourses in materiality, contributors address the potential of a material engagement to animate archival content. Analysing the systems, processes and actions that constitute the shapes, forms and structures in which individual archival objects accumulate, and the underpinnings which may hold them in place as an archival body, the book considers ways in which the inexorable move to the digital affects traditional theories of the physical archival object. It also considers how stewardship practices such as description and metadata creation can accommodate these changes.

The Materiality of the Archive

unifies theory and practice and brings together professional and academic perspectives. The book is essential reading for academics, researchers and postgraduate students working in the fields of archive studies, museology, art history and material culture.

Part I - In the Archive: practices and encounters;
1. Material
evidences surviving in the form of writing: materiality in archival theory
and practice; 2 The true object of study: the material body of the analogue
archive; 3 Archival finding aids and perceptual frames: extending material
contact points through Stephen Chaplins Slade School Archive Reader; 4
Archiving with scissors: materiality and cutting practices in photographic
archives; Part II - With the archive: energy; 5 Valentines Jacket; 6 The
archive as a site of making; 7 Applications of energy: a study of artists and
entropy in the material; 8 Archival endings: erosion and erasure in the film
archive; Part III About the Archive: Technologies; 9 The material archive
everyday: technologies of the filing system; 10 The materialism of
techno-archival memory; 11 Paper tensions: from flipbooks to scanners the
role of paper in moving image practices; 12 Expressing materiality in
archival records; Part IV Beyond the archive: expanding the frame;13 Lost
unities: the materiality of the migrated archives; 14 Fabrications: the quilt
as archive;15 Performing gestures towards the archive: queer fragments and
other ways of mattering; 16 Thats special, well keep that: a conversation
about counter archiving and socially engaged practice at Tate Exchange
Sue Breakell is Archive Director and Principal Research Fellow at the University of Brighton Design Archives, UK. She was formerly head of Tate Archive, London and War Artists Archivist / Museum Archivist at IWM London. Her research bridges critical archive studies, twentieth century art and design history and material culture.

Wendy Russell is an independent researcher and Special Collections Archivist at the British Film Institute, UK. She has formerly worked at the Archives and Special Collections Centre at the University of the Arts London, and as a freelance archivist. She was Secretary then Chair of the ARLIS/UK & Ireland Committee for Art and Design Archives (CADA) between 2011-2018.