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Chair: Dr Michael Innes, Director of the Conflict Records Unit

Speaker:Michelle Caswell, Associate Professor of Archival Studies in the Department of Information Studies at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA)

This event is part of the Conflict Records Unit speaker event series with scholars and practitioners in the field of conflict records. 

 

Grounded in the emerging field of critical archival studies, this talk will look toward the radical politics of autonomous minoritized identity-based community archives to envision new liberatory theories and practices. Based on more than a decade of ethnography at community archives sites including the South Asian American Digital Archive (SAADA), the talk will explore how members of minoritized communities activate records to build solidarities across and within communities, trouble linear progress narratives, and disrupt cycles of oppression.

By catalyzing corollary records from the past, communities that steward, use and are represented by community archives learn political strategies and get inspiration. Caswell will explore the temporal, representational, and material aspects of liberatory memory work, ultimately arguing that archival disruptions in time and space should be neither about the past nor the future, but about the liberatory affects and effects of memory work in the present. She will also address how theories of autonomy, custody, and reparation from community archives can inform survivor-centered approaches to all kinds of records. The talk will draw from Caswell’s new book, Urgent Archives: Enacting Liberatory Memory Work (Routledge, May 2021).

 

 

Bio

Michelle Caswell, PhD, is an Associate Professor of Archival Studies in the Department of Information Studies at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA). Caswell directs a team of students at UCLA’s Community Archives Lab (https://communityarchiveslab.ucla.edu/), which explores the ways that independent, identity-based memory organizations document, shape, and provide access to the histories of minoritized communities, with a particular emphasis on understanding their affective, political, and artistic impact. In 2008, together with Samip Mallick, Caswell co-founded the South Asian American Digital Archive (http://www.saada.org), an online repository that documents and provides access to the stories of South Asian Americans. She is the author of the books Urgent Archives: Enacting Liberatory Memory Work (Routledge Press, 2021) and Archiving the Unspeakable: Silence, Memory and the Photographic Record in Cambodia (University of Wisconsin Press, 2014), as well as more than 50 peer-reviewed articles in critical archival studies.

 

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MichaelInnesVF

Visiting Senior Research Fellow