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Featuring over fifty illustrations and twenty-three original
chapters that explore cases from a wide range of fields, including
library and archival studies, literary studies, art history, media
studies, sound studies, folklore studies, game studies, and
education, Collection Thinking builds on the important scholarly
works produced on the topic of the archive over the past two
decades and contributes to ongoing debates on the historical status
of memory institutions. The volume illustrates how the concept of
"collection" bridges these institutional and structural categories,
and generates discussions of cultural activities involving
artifactual arrangement, preservation, curation, and circulation in
both the private and the public spheres. Edited collaboratively by
three senior scholars with expertise in the fields of literature,
art history, archives, and museums, Collection Thinking is designed
to stimulate interdisciplinary reflection and conversation. This
book will be of interest to scholars and practitioners interested
in how we organize materials for research across disciplines in the
humanities and social sciences. With case studies that range from
collecting Barbie dolls to medieval embroideries, and with
contributions from practitioners on record collecting, the creation
of sub-culture archives, and collection as artistic practice, this
volume will appeal to anyone who has ever wondered about why and
how collections are made.
In Suspended Conversations Martha Langford shows how photographic
albums tell intimate and revealing stories about individuals and
families. Rather than isolate the individual photograph, treat
albums as texts, or argue that photography has supplanted memory,
she demonstrates that the photographic album must be taken as a
whole and interpreted as a visual and verbal performance that
extends oral consciousness. Exhibiting a collection of photographic
travelogues, memoirs, thematic collections, and family sagas
compiled between 1860 and 1960 and held by the McCord Museum of
Canadian History, this second edition includes a revised and
expanded preface along with new photographs of the Notman albums.
Printed in colour throughout, the enhanced material draws out the
distinct nuances and details of each album, giving them new life to
tell their stories. Albums are treasured by families, collected as
illustrations of the past by museums of social history, and
examined by scholars for what they can reveal about attitudes and
sensibilities, but when no one is left to tell the tale, the
intrigue of the album becomes a puzzle, a suspended conversation.
Langford argues that oral consciousness provides the missing key.
Correlating photography and orality, she explains how albums were
designed to work as performances and how we can unlock their
mysteries. A fascinating glimpse of the preoccupations of previous
centuries, Suspended Conversations brings photography into the
great conversation of how we remember and how we send our stories
into the future.
The agency of photographs is a recurrent concern within the context
of the city. Whether found in architectural records, social
documentary, photojournalism, or artistic practice, photographic
objects are embedded in urban contestation, aesthetically charged
by artists, reinserted into social histories, and mobilized to
imagine a future city. Photogenic Montreal takes a question
initially posed by heritage debates - what does photography
preserve? - and creates a rich conversation about the agency of the
human actors before and behind the camera, and of the medium
itself. The interplay of archives and activisms structures the
book. Photographs that appear to be sealed off in newspapers,
storage rooms, or archives accrue new meaning when they cross the
threshold back into social spaces and circulate anew. It is through
the reactivation of archival photographs that submerged traces of
urban experience are discovered, and alternate histories of
Montreal can be recounted. Multiple forms of activism and artistic
expression complement this archival work. Beginning in the 1960s,
community-minded and heritage groups responded to the tensions
arising from urban reconstruction, gentrification, and the erasure
of neighbourhoods; this activism also left its photographic traces.
Attentive to the still-changing face of the city's architecture,
neighbourhoods, and street life, Photogenic Montreal participates
in debates about who the city belongs to, who speaks on its behalf,
and how to picture its past and present.
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