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E-raamat: Living Indigenous Archives

(University of Technology Sydney, Australia)
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Living Indigenous Archives invites readers to consider new pathways for developing and sustaining archival landscapes that are embedded with respect for Indigenous worldviews and cultural flows of knowledge.



Living Indigenous Archives invites readers to consider new pathways for developing and sustaining archival landscapes that are embedded with respect for Indigenous worldviews and cultural flows of knowledge.

Drawing on First Nations experiences in Australia, the book considers the need to reframe archives in order to rebalance power and restore dignity to the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people captured in the archives. Contributing to research on the contested nature of archives and the need for archival decolonisation, the book examines whether current, dominant approaches to archiving and managing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledges support Indigenous people's wellbeing and recognize Indigenous sovereignty in an archival context. Drawing on autoethnographical research and a series of yarning sessions with First Nations people, the book shares a number of case studies that discuss themes related to Indigenous archiving. These include: community engagement approaches to facilitate reciprocal relationships and counter-storytelling; archival reparations; enacting protocols to support archives' spiritual and emotional care; and the support for Indigenous language revitalization in archives.

Living Indigenous Archives highlights the need for Indigenous reclamation of archives and the dismantling of colonial archiving models that are harmful to Indigenous people’s wellbeing. The book’s theoretical and practical underpinnings will be relevant to academics and students working in archival studies, as well as those engaged in the study of library and information science, Indigenous peoples and history.

Acknowledgements

Introduction: Indigenous Reclamation and Refiguring of the Archives

Part I Contested Indigenous Archives

1. First Nations Engagement With Archives

2. The Dangers and Harms of the Colonial Model of Archiving for Aboriginal
people

3. Indigenous Well-Being, Sovereignty and Indigenous Living Archives on
Country

Part II Archival Healing, Reclamation and Resurgence

4. Archival Interventions: Reciprocal Relationships and Returning Love to
Ancestors

5. Archival Reparations: The Right to Know and the Right of Reply

6. Indigenous Protocols for Colonial Repair and Cultural Care in the
Archives

Conclusion

Index
Kirsten Thorpe (Worimi, Port Stephens) is Associate Professor and Chancellors Indigenous Research Fellow at Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous Education & Research, University of Technology, Sydney, where she leads the Indigenous Archives and Data Stewardship Hub. Her research focuses on Indigenous protocols and decolonising practices in libraries and archives, advocating for Indigenous self-determination over cultural heritage materials and developing frameworks for Indigenous Data Sovereignty. She is co-founder of the Indigenous Archives Collective and serves on the International Council on Archives Expert Group on Indigenous Matters and the National Archives of Australia Advisory Council. She champions the development of Living Indigenous Archives on Country and the Right of Reply to colonial records.