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Migration, Memory and Archival Agency.
Migration, Memory and Archival Agency.
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In short the assumption can be made that by creating more vast and easily accessable digital archives the number of imagined worlds and imagined individual selves is rising. This is especially true for migrants. For them the will to aspire, to leave the current situation and go somewhere else needs an imagination of what to aspire to (more precisely: where to migrate and what to do there). So by being able to access archives and feed their imagination their potencial to aspire is heightened.
Another interesting aspect is that for migrants memory becomes hyper-valued because they are leaving the domain of the collective memory they belong to as well as the domain their individual memory is tied to. Therefore, when arrived and settled down at the location they migrated to they have to piece their identity back together. Sometimes without even exactly knowing of what has been lost.

Revision as of 12:53, 16 January 2012

Memory and the Archive.


Gap between neural memory and social location of memory.

Formerly (Humanist perspective): The Archive as obejctive tool to preserve the "prestige of the past" (Halbwachs) in the form of documents. The idea of document in that context has since then gained a wider and wider sense. Documents can now beartifacts, monuments or even parts of a city. Here the document's inherent spirit is the driving force of the archive. Thus the archive is sacralized, resulting in a split of memory and desire.

Foucault questioned the objectivity of the archive by looking at the design by which the traces in the archive are produced. He sees the archive not as way to preserve accidental and/or precious traces of collective memory but as way (or tool) for authorities to selectively construct this collective memory.

Besides Foucault's dark and dystopian views of the archive there is a more neutral perspective to the archive. Documentation should rather be seen as intervention, and all archiving as part of some sort of collective project. The archive is not just a place to keep memories that might be interesting for collective memory, but more of an anticipated form of the future collective memory which the archive is being built towards.

Due to the Internet and it's free-for-all capability to build, edit and maintain archives and the lack of stately curation of these archives, the archive is being brought back closer to it's original state of being a "deliberate site for the production of anticipated memories by international communities".

New to this form of the archive: natural social collectivities build memories out of connectivity, virtual collectivities build memories out of connectivity. These are the acted out fantasies of restoring agency (power) to the game of sociality, not a way of seeking escape from the social as such. So on the one hand the digital interactive archive is able to restore the important social, collective memory building workings of the archive but on the other hand it denaturalizes the original relationship of memory and the archive by making the interactive archive the basis of collective memeory rather than leaving memory as a substrate that guarantees the ethical value of the archive.


Migration, Memory and Archival Agency.


In short the assumption can be made that by creating more vast and easily accessable digital archives the number of imagined worlds and imagined individual selves is rising. This is especially true for migrants. For them the will to aspire, to leave the current situation and go somewhere else needs an imagination of what to aspire to (more precisely: where to migrate and what to do there). So by being able to access archives and feed their imagination their potencial to aspire is heightened.

Another interesting aspect is that for migrants memory becomes hyper-valued because they are leaving the domain of the collective memory they belong to as well as the domain their individual memory is tied to. Therefore, when arrived and settled down at the location they migrated to they have to piece their identity back together. Sometimes without even exactly knowing of what has been lost.