Skip to main content
Presentation
Focusing the Archival Gaze: A Preliminary Definition and Model
Digital Scholarship and Initiatives Conference Presentations and Posters
  • Kimberly Anderson, Iowa State University
  • Harrison W. Inefuku, Iowa State University
Document Type
Presentation
Disciplines
Publication Date
7-9-2016
Conference Title
Archival Education and Research Institute
Conference Date
July 8-12, 2016
Geolocation
(41.1536674, -81.35788589999999)
Abstract

Over the past several decades, authors from within and without the archival profession have applied poststructural theories to the Archive and archives. Several authors have used the term "archival gaze," but the phrase has been neither defined nor thoroughly interrogated in the published literature. We seek to understand what makes a gaze archival, and what the implications for archival practice are. We will present on research in progress intended to articulate a definition and model of the archival gaze. Drawing on diplomatics, poststructuralism and Gaze theories (including Mulvey and hooks), this research explores the dynamics of power present in the archival gaze. To do so, we propose three layers of gaze analysis: content, documentary and archival. Within these layers, we examine the flow and manifestation of power between four actors (defined in relation to the record: subject, creator, viewer and archivist), and the information activities that this power enables. We will present our definition and model and discuss the results of our research so far.

Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Kimberly Anderson and Harrison W. Inefuku. "Focusing the Archival Gaze: A Preliminary Definition and Model" Kent, OH, United States(2016)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/kimberly_anderson/17/