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Reflections

Archives as multifaceted narratives: linking the ‘touchstones’ of community memory

Pages 155-157 | Published online: 30 Jul 2014
 

Notes

1. Laura Millar, ‘Touchstones: Considering the Relationship Between Memory and Archives’, Archivaria, no. 61, Spring 2006, available at <http://journals.sfu.ca/archivar/index.php/archivaria/article/view/12537>, accessed 18 February 2014.

2. Sue McKemmish, Michael Piggott, Barbara Reed and Frank Upward (eds), Archives: Recordkeeping in Society, CIS: Centre for Information Studies, Wagga Wagga, New South Wales, 2005.

3. Shannon Sullivan, ‘Ethical Slippages, Shattered Horizons, and the Zebra Striping of the Unconscious: Fanon on Social, Bodily, and Psychical Space’, Philosophy and Geography, vol. 7, no. 1, February 2004, pp. 9–24. E Ketelaar, ‘Recordkeeping and Societal Power’, in McKemmish, Piggott, Reed and Upward, pp. 277–98.

4. Rebecca Knuth, Burning Books and Leveling Libraries: Extremist Violence and Cultural Destruction, Praeger, London, 2006, p. 21.

5. ibid., p. 136 (quoting Edward Gargan, 2002, p. 18).

6. Terry Cook, ‘Evidence, Memory, Identity, and Community: Four Shifting Archival Paradigms’, Archival Science, vol. 13, nos 2–3, 1 June 2013, pp. 95–120, doi:10.1007/s10502-012-9180-7.

7. Peter Burke, ‘Overture. The New History: Its Past and Its Future’, in Peter Burke, New Perspectives on Historical Writing, second ed., Polity, Cambridge, 2001, pp. 1–24.

8. Michel Foucault, The History of Sexuality: Volume 1, Penguin Group Australia, Camberwell, Victoria, 2008.

9. Knuth.

10. Barbara Reed, ‘Access Today’, Recordkeeping Roundtable, 2013, available at <http://recordkeepingroundtable.files.wordpress.com/2013/09/access.pdf>, accessed 13 February 2014.

11. Adrian Cunningham (ed.), The Arrangement and Description of Archives Amid Administrative and Technological Change: Essays by and About Peter Scott, Australian Society of Archivists, Canberra, 2010.

12. Reed, p. 8.

13. Tim Sherratt, ‘Cultural-Pathways to Memory: Accessing Archives on the WWW’, AusWeb96, 1996, available at <http://ausweb.scu.edu.au/aw96/cultural/sherratt/paper.htm>, accessed 12 May 2013. Barbara Reed, ‘Beyond Perceived Boundaries: Imagining the Potential of Pluralised Recordkeeping’, Archives and Manuscripts, vol. 33, no. 1, 2005, p. 176. Gavan McCarthy and Joanne Evans, ‘Principles for Archival Information Services in the Public Domain’, Archives and Manuscripts, vol. 40, no. 1, March 2012, pp. 54–67. doi:10.1080/01576895.2012.670872.

14. Joanne Evans, Sue McKemmish and Barbara Reed, ‘Making Metadata Matter: Outcomes From the Clever Recordkeeping Metadata Project’, Archives and Manuscripts, vol. 37, no. 1, 2009, pp. 28–56.

15. Anne Gilliland and Sue McKemmish, ‘Recordkeeping Metadata, the Archival Multiverse, and Societal Grand Challenges’, Kuching, Sarawak, Malaysia, 2012, available at <http://dcevents.dublincore.org/IntConf/dc-2012/paper/viewPaper/108>, accessed 26 May 2013.

16. Cook.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Belinda Battley

Belinda Battley is a senior archivist in the Auckland office of Archives New Zealand. She holds an MIS from Victoria University, and is currently enrolled as a PhD student at Monash University. Her PhD research relates to archival description, communities and their members, and collective memory.

Elizabeth Daniels

Elizabeth Daniels is a project archivist at the University of Melbourne e-Scholarship Research Centre and a PhD student at Monash University. Her PhD research aims to explore the role of archives in constructing and de-constructing ‘othered’ identities. Elizabeth holds an Honours in Social Science (Policy and Research) from RMIT University and a Post Graduate Diploma in Information and Knowledge Management from Monash University.

Gregory Rolan

Greg Rolan has had a successful career in IT spanning enterprise systems management, software architecture and development, industry training and a high-tech start-up. He returned to study after a 30-year hiatus and recently completed a MBIS(Honours) degree in Information and Knowledge Management at Monash University. Greg’s PhD research comprises theoretical as well as design-science/action-research investigations into archival informatics and systems interoperability.

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