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  1. dictionary.archivists.org

    Notes The concept of archival silence has overlaps with allied fields that include digital humanities and history. Further, many who have written about it have pointed to Michel-Rolph Trouillot's influence in developing the idea in his book, Silencing the Past: Power and Production of History (Boston: Beacon Press, 1995). While he did not use the exact term, the themes are visible in the ...
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  3. facinghistory.org

    The problem of archival silences reveals that there are important questions for teachers and students to ask of the primary and secondary sources they explore in the classroom, and that the answers to those questions may be just as, if not more, illuminating than the contents of the sources themselves. Questions like where did this source come ...
  4. cambridge.org

    One of the most profound paradoxes of archival research is how we investigate histories that do not appear in the archives. This is a problem particularly when we attempt to trace the lives, thoughts, and practices of some of the most marginalized people in society: those who are excluded from view, pushed to the margins, or made to disappear completely.
  5. cambridge.org

    It is this that is the reason for so many silences. Archival creation is, of course, a human process, starting from individuals who produce the records, continuing through the selection process used by archivists and ending up with cataloguing and delivery of documents. Indeed, archival institutions may literally impose silence on records.
  6. cambridge.org

    RECENT THEORIZATIONS OF archival silence signal a heightened and expanding concern with information that is lost, concealed, destroyed or simply not available for scholarly use. For a dynamic and interdisciplinary group of artists, scholars and theorists, archival silence serves as a productive metaphor as well as a kind of shorthand to refer ...
  7. lib.guides.umbc.edu

    Another way to combat bias and silence in archives is to follow what Dominique Luster calls "racially conscious, culturally competent archival theory" -- working directly with communities to ensure that their voices and stories are being recorded, documented, and described in ways that accurately capture their experience.Luster's presentation, "Archives Have the Power to Boost Marginalized ...
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