bookmark_borderArchives and Indigenous Trauma

Today I listened to a talk by Kirsten Thorpe titled “Critical Librarianship – Indigenous Librarianship”. She brought up a very good point about Indigenous trauma in collections and archives. She said it should be recognised that archives are places of Sorry Business (an Aboriginal term meaning grieving, death, loss, and traumatic events). As such, should also be a trauma-based approach to helping Aboriginal people when navigating this, and workplaces should have special means of support for Aboriginal people. The support that Indigenous people need is different to the standard applied for non-Indigenous people and institutions have to recognise this and educate themselves.

She provided the following resource about supporting Aboriginal people who have been affected by the Stolen Generations:
https://healingfoundation.org.au/

There is also a course by the Australian Society of Archivists called “A Trauma-Informed Approach to Managing Archives”:
https://www.archivists.org.au/events/event/a-trauma-informed-approach-to-managing-archives

bookmark_borderOn Archives Having the Power to Boost Marginalized Voices

This post is about TED talk by archivist Dominique Luster and her work to uplift African American voices in historical records that are held by archives. She makes the important point that history is not just a linear recounting of events, it can have bias and re-write peoples’ pasts from a particular person or group’s point of view, essentially erasing marginalised voices.

“The inclusion or exclusion of documents from history making is an expression of power.” – Dominique Luster

She is constructing an archive of works by Pittsburgh journalist Teenie Harris, who, via his articles and photography, documented everyday African American lives from the 1930s-1970s. The archive is being built and described as the community would describe it, using their standards and vocabularies. It’s a short talk, but she has some very important points to make in terms of inclusiveness and bias and it’s well worth a watch.

Continue reading “On Archives Having the Power to Boost Marginalized Voices”