Permanent record · RIR–2076
Reassembling Digital Archives: Methodological Strategies for Counter-Archiving and Marginalized Community Memory
This paper proposes novel techniques for reassembling digital archives to challenge dominant power structures and include marginalized voices.
How can digital archival techniques be reconfigured to challenge canonical power structures and preserve marginalized memories?
Knowledge gap
What remains worth asking
Current digital archival practices may inadvertently reinforce existing biases rather than promoting inclusive historical narratives.
Potential contribution
Why it may matter
Offers a framework for cultural institutions to democratize digital memory and archival access.
Academic placement
OECD fields and topic tags
Scope: Digital archival practices and community memory. · Method signals: Archival Research, Computational Analysis
Possible study pathways
One question, different levels
Analyzing the algorithmic bias in digital heritage collections.
Developing new methodologies for counter-archiving in the digital age.
Qualification signal
88/100
- Highly relevant to museum and library studies.
- Interdisciplinary approach.
- Open-access scholarly source and DOI metadata verified
Provenance
Research Idea Registry curation
- DOI and bibliographic metadata independently resolved
- Open-access status verified
- The research direction is transparently marked as AI-inferred
APA 7 source
Blanke, T. (2024). Reassembling digital archives—strategies for counter-archiving. Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 11(1), Article 201. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-024-02668-4
Paper abstract and discussion context; AI-inferred direction
Open source ↗