Tag Archives: Re-mixing

OHD_BLG_0077 RE-MIX (reading group – 16/02/21)

Readings:

M. Frisch – “Three Dimensions and More: Oral History Beyond the Paradoxes of Method” in Handbook of Emergent Methods

J. Bornat et al. – “Don’t mix race with specialty”: Interviewing South Asian Overseas-Trained Geriatricians (this was the wrong piece but we went with it)

Bornat piece

The Bornat might have been the wrong piece but it definitely showed how complex oral histories are. The amount of layers that can be found in the interviews that were conducted with the South Asian Geriatricians would make one hell of a cake. It can be said that all of these layers symbolise a different part of someone’s identity and are all viewed through the lens of memory which makes things extra complicated. The way we remember things lives in the present which is often a very different world to the past. This can be especially seen in the language. The language that we used to describe our identity is constantly changing just look at the ‘new’ identities found in LGBTQ+ or the language that movements like the metoo movement or blacklivesmatter have all given us to talk about life and experience.

When we remember things we take this new vocabulary with us, which sometimes clashes with the feelings that we initially had during the event that is being remember. For example, a woman post-metoo might look back a certain incident that she now understands as being sexual harassment but at the time she just put up with it. These two interpretations of the event, the initial one and the post-metoo one can cause all sorts of reactions.

e.g.

  • It couldn’t have been that bad because you are only talking about it now
  • It was bad but you did not know why because you did not have the words to describe it
  • It didn’t matter at the time and you don’t really care about it now but because of all this language you feel you should

Memory is messy especially when dealing with identity because it changes constantly.

Frisch

I am very familiar with the Frisch piece but many in the reading group hadn’t read it before. What was funny to see was how many had the same reaction I did when I first read it: that it was both obvious, innovative and fundamentally frustrating because he does not give any answers.

Because I had already read the Frisch piece some of the things that had been mention were not completely new to me. The ethical difficulties of oral history archives (Graham wondered whether me might be making too much of a fuss.) Digital silver bullets that will rid us of all access problems?

However, the talk around one theme did intrigue me and that was reuse. This theme was triggered by someone asking whether oral histories even get reused now. Turns out oral historians do not really reuse but oral histories are reused in popular culture, especially for World War novels. All this led me to dig up some old thoughts I had on remixing, which I have already written on after one of the NYU lectures I attended. And at the top of the post is the trailer for the exhibition that planted this idea of remixing in my head way back when.

There are strange power dynamics that are interlocked with reuse and remixing. The decision to store something is an incredibly powerful move, mostly because it involves money. The move to store also automatically highlights documents that are not deemed important enough to store. So now you have items that have been declared important and those that are not, all done by a single person or body of power. However, power shifts over time so eventually someone might want to tell a different story, but they can’t rely on what is stored because that does not represent them, so they remix and create a ‘new’ history. This ‘new’ history might be true or it might be completely fabricated but either way it is necessary. Remixing is a power move that in my eyes should not be hindered by power structures, because the previous power structures already declared what was allowed to be kept.

You can also look at this through the academia vs pop culture lens. Andy pointed out that one of the main reasons people go into oral history is because they like talking to people and not necessarily because they like digging through archives. Now one could easily declare that we therefore should not really bother storing oral histories, but people do use them it’s just that oral historians don’t. In many industries you have those who make and those who can’t afford to make so they adapt and modify often paying tribute to the original. It is exactly this that I am building an archive for; not for oral historians but those who want to remix to reuse.

OHD_BLG_0102 DIGITAL FORAYS: ARCHIVES & ACTIVATION // ARTISTS AND ACCESS

with Asunción Molinos Gordo (Artist), Mohammad Shawky Hassan (Artist), Diana Allan (McGill University), & Discussant Helga Tawil-Souri (NYU).
In partnership with ArteEast & the Arab American National Museum)
15/10/20

At the start of the talk someone mentioned that they missed the mingling after a talks. Like the coffee houses Steven Johnson talks about.

Then I thought about whether it would be interesting to map these post talk chats by mic-ing people up and tracking their movements and interactions. \

Re-mixing

Just like the previous talk this was mainly about archival work concerning the middle east. Because of this everything (understandably) is coated in this layer of reclaiming ones history. This in combination with artists leads to a re-mixing of archives, putting a new lens on it. In some circumstances this means creating a whole new story. Using bits from the archive and remixing them to such a degree that a (maybe not completely factual) story is created. However the factual accuracy of the story does not really matter. These works are made in the freedom of the artistic space and their main aim is to become some thing that stands against the state archive and tell the story of a minority.

In one particular case during the talk the person was using archive footage from the British Library that had such strict copyright laws that she had to do extensive manipulation in order to even be able to make a film. This brought a lot of frustration since the footage is British colonial propaganda.

This re-mixing and manipulating of state archives in order to create something for a minority reminded me of the streetwear exhibition that I went to in Rotterdam. I see parallels between the practice of mixing and matching clothing the belonged to an elite with tracksuits and sportswear (among other things) order to create this own culture and what these artists create using archival footage. (Especially when you look at issues of copyright.)

In addition to streetwear the discussant Helga Tawil-Souri brought up Dada and how they used collage in order to make sense of a world increasingly filled with information. What the Dada-ist would have made of this age I do not know.

The “dead” .v. “alive”

There was a lot of discussion around resolute-ness of archiving something. By archiving something are you saying that it’s over? Then when do you start archiving a revolution? And when you archive something are you then also “creating” things to not be archived? Is it dead when you archive something? Should it be dead? Do we kill it when we archive it? Does an archive work best when it is alive? When the stories live in the people? Does an archive need a community? Even if they are subject to legend and myth? Why do consider an object truth when some one still has to label the object?

Decentralised Archives

The questions asked in “dead” .v. “alive” are nearly all subject to power structures. Whoever is in charge of the archive can allow new stories to be created or they can kill it, keeping it in its hibernated state. Like copyright. After all “history is written by the winners”.

But how do we break down these power structures?

A lot of people are using social media and other digital platforms but as we slowly realising now that just moves the power over the archive from the state to unelected billionaires (not ideal).

Diana Allan mentioned the idea of exiled archives. Archives created by refugees and those that move around the globe. This might allow the creation of archives that aren’t chained to any state. However this then brings up the issue with copyright and privacy.

Obviously the artists taking part in this talk also challenge the power structures by remixing. But the archives need to be open to this happening. Maybe having regular artist in residence.