Archiving Blackness: Reimagining and Recreating the Archive(s) as Literary and Information Wake Workas Literary and Information Wake Wor
Gabriel, Jamillah R.
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/117210
Description
Title
Archiving Blackness: Reimagining and Recreating the Archive(s) as Literary and Information Wake Workas Literary and Information Wake Wor
Author(s)
Gabriel, Jamillah R.
Issue Date
2023
Keyword(s)
archives
archivists
community archives
speculative fiction
Black writers
fiction writers
Black archivists
wake work
Blackness
library and information science
archival science
archive
Black studies
Black critical thought
Abstract
“…we, Black people everywhere and anywhere we are, still produce in, into, and through the wake an insistence on existing: we insist Black being into the wake.”
– Christina Sharpe, In the Wake (2016)
In this paper, I introduce Christina Sharpe’s conceptualizations of wake and wake work, as they pertain to archiving the experiences of Blackness to better understand how the archive and archives are vital for those living and working in the wake of slavery. I am particularly interested in the wake work conducted both in literary works (speculative fiction) and at information sites (community archives). To that end, I closely examine archives as they are presented in literature so as to explicate how these archival narratives created by Black authors perform wake work. Moreover, I make the connection between literary wake work, that which is performed by Black speculative fiction writers, and information wake work, that which is performed by Black community archivists, before delving into an analysis of the physical act of creating archives as the wake work of Black archivists. This investigation of wake work and archive(s) is meant to articulate Black life through a multidisciplinary lens, one that merges scholarship in Black studies, archives, information, and literature. My interrogation of archiving Blackness centers on the concepts of “wake” and “wake work,” and how they can be used to characterize the act of archiving the histories and the futures of Black people as an intervention towards coloring and diversifying the archival record.
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