Powerpoint Attachment
Powerpoint Attachment
Powerpoint Attachment
“Since power and the ability to create archives rested with the
island’s elite, the records naturally reflect the events they felt
were important”
*Victoria Borg O’flaherty “Overcoming anonymity: Kittians and their archives” in Bastian, Jeannette and Ben Alexander. Community Archives: The Shaping of Memory. London, 2009
.
Archives and the Colonized
• “By recognizing that the archive was an inherent part of the
machinery of colonialism, one becomes conscious of its limitations in
contributing to the history of the colonized in a post-colonial
community and yet it is still a source of information about them”
*Victoria Borg O’flaherty “Overcoming anonymity: Kittians and their archives” In “Community
Archives: the shaping of memory” ed by Jeannette Bastian and Ben Allexander, London, 2009
*The Archivist of St Kitts and Nevis and one of the region’s prominent archivists
St Kitts and their Archives
• “Many natives of St Kitts have claimed that they do not care about the
past because there is nothing in it that is worth remembering. The
complexities of the relationship of post-colonial societies and their
history have often had an impact on the way archives are viewed.
Kittitian researchers approach them with a sense of awe, that
something so old has survived while others call them ‘white people
archives’ and refuse to use them”.
• “The statement is a rejection of the archives of the colonizer and a
yearning or what is not there – an archive of the colonized”
• “For the Kittitian community …the gossip of village life gives rise to a history that is
immediate, accessible and appealing to a people whose roots had been severed and who
were governed by an alien elite”
Memory & Oral History
• “In any community, collective memory is supported through a mosaic
of different forms, but this is particularly the case for societies that
encountered literacy and written records within the fairly recent past.
Throughout the Pacific islands, the sliver of community memory and
evidence constituted by written records preserved in local archival
institutions is exceptionally slender. It represents a few tattered
strands in a finely woven mat of sources for sources of interpretation
of communities’ histories and identities, their rights and entitlements.
These strands are interwoven with stories, songs, dances, myths, and
traditions passed through generations by word of mouth”. A.
Cunningham and E. Wareham, ‘Introduction: Communities of Memory: Ideas from the
Islands on Refiguring Archival Identities’, Comma: International Journal on Archives, Vol.1
2011, pp. 1-3.
Culture and Memory
• “Cultural identities come from somewhere, have histories... It is
always constructed through memory, fantasy, narrative and myth.
Cultural identities are the points of identification, the unstable points
of identification or suture, which are made, within the discourse of
history and culture”.
• , Community archives are the opposite of this official place and space.
They seek to include those that have been marginalised by the
exclusiveness of the archival process and the archival narrative
Community Archives
• The hallmark of community archives is not only their pursuit and
creation of records, but more importantly, their desire to keep and
maintain these records within their communal space and structure.
This modus operandi challenged the perceived elitism of the
institutional repository, by avoiding any conflicts with regards to
collecting policies and mandates
Community Archives
• Community archives within the Caribbean will be a useful means of
acknowledging communities that have been marginalized by
colonialism, cultural elitism, socio-religious discrimination and racism,
among other things. Other non-traditional forms of records, which
are of significance to their communities, will be validated.
Non traditional archives
• The hallmark of community archives is not only their pursuit and
creation of records, but more importantly, their desire to keep and
maintain these records within their communal space and structure.
This modus operandi challenged the perceived elitism of the
institutional repository, by avoiding any conflicts with regards to
collecting policies and mandates
Non traditional archives
• Bastian contends:
• Events such as performances, parades, celebrations, and
commemorations, while generally recognised as expressions of
cultural values may require a considerable stretch of archival
boundaries in order to be thought of as archival evidence or even as
records themselves... Each of these societal events generally do not
occur in isolation, but rather form components of a complex matrix, a
web of multilayered interconnected formats—visual, oral and
textual—that together comprise a self-contained archive of cultural
expression”
Non traditional archives
• By recognising the enduring value of these ‘living archives’, i.e.
privileging the oral traditions, the performances, the material cultural
expressions, as complementary to the written word, is to broaden the
relevance of archives to the community and its breadth of information
on the community’s heritage.
• J. Bastian, ‘Play Mas’: Carnival in the Archives and the Archives in Carnival:
Records and Community Identity in the US Virgin Islands’, A. S. Vol. 9, 2009,
pp.114-115.
Excerpts from Dr Griffin’s unpublished thesis