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The essays that comprise Elusive Archives raise a common question:
how do we study material culture when the objects of study are
transient, evanescent, dispersed or subjective? Such things resist
the taxonomic protocols that institutions, such as museums and
archives, rely on to channel their acquisitions into meaningful
collections. What holds these disparate things together here are
the questions authors ask of them. Each essay creates by means of
its method a provisional collection of things, an elusive
archive. Scattered matter then becomes fixed within each
author’s analytical framework rather than within the walls of an
archive’s reading room or in cases along a museum corridor. This
book follows the ways in which objects may be identified, gathered,
arranged, conceptualized and even displayed rather than by
“discovering” artifacts in an archive and then asking how they
came to be there. The authors approach material culture outside the
traditional bounds of learning about the past. Their essays are
varied not only in subject matter but also in narrative format and
conceptual reach, making the volume accessible and easy to navigate
for a quick reference or, if read straight through, build toward a
new way to think about material culture.
How making models allows us to recall what was and to discover what
still might be Whether looking inward to the intricacies of
human anatomy or outward to the furthest recesses of the universe,
expanding the boundaries of human inquiry depends to a surprisingly
large degree on the making of models. In this wide-ranging volume,
scholars from diverse fields examine the interrelationships between
a model’s material foundations and the otherwise invisible things
it gestures toward, underscoring the pivotal role of models in
understanding and shaping the world around us. Whether in the form
of reproductions, interpretive processes, or constitutive tools,
models may bridge the gap between the tangible and the abstract. By
focusing on the material aspects of models, including the digital
ones that would seem to displace their analogue forebears, these
insightful essays ground modeling as a tactile and emphatically
humanistic endeavor. With contributions from scholars in the
history of science and technology, visual studies, musicology,
literary studies, and material culture, this book demonstrates that
models serve as invaluable tools across every field of cultural
development, both historically and in the present day. Modelwork is
unique in calling attention to modeling’s duality, a dynamic
exchange between imagination and matter. This singular publication
shows us how models shape our ability to ascertain the surrounding
world and to find new ways to transform it. Contributors:
Hilary Bryon, Virginia Tech; Johanna Drucker, UCLA; Seher Erdoğan
Ford, Temple U; Peter Galison, Harvard U; Lisa Gitelman, New York
U; Reed Gochberg, Harvard U; Catherine Newman Howe, Williams
College; Christopher J. Lukasik, Purdue U; Martin Scherzinger, New
York U; Juliet S. Sperling, U of Washington; Annabel Jane Wharton,
Duke U.
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