2014
DOI: 10.1111/tran.12070
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Collecting, kitsch and the intimate geographies of social memory: a story of archival autoethnography

Abstract: Collecting, kitsch and the intimate geographies of social memory: a story of archival autoethnography Dydia DeLyserThis paper engages recent creative approaches to the archive in geography to explore an approach I term archival autoethnography: collecting and contributing to the archive ourselves, and critically engaging with those practices. I use my own collection of kitsch souvenirs of the 19th-century southern California novel Ramona -nearly all acquired after eBay auctions transformed the geography of col… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…Memories are remembrances and recollections of the past that evoke emotions and experiences in/of/at places. They can be experienced in many forms including public (Drozdzewski, ; Hayden, ; Johnson, ), private (DeLyser, ; Fortier, ), and collective memories (Halbwachs, ; Wertsch, ). Memory has the power to provoke remembrances in different places, using the more‐than‐human (objects), emotions (senses), and experiences as probes.…”
Section: The Memory and Identity Nexus In The Homementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Memories are remembrances and recollections of the past that evoke emotions and experiences in/of/at places. They can be experienced in many forms including public (Drozdzewski, ; Hayden, ; Johnson, ), private (DeLyser, ; Fortier, ), and collective memories (Halbwachs, ; Wertsch, ). Memory has the power to provoke remembrances in different places, using the more‐than‐human (objects), emotions (senses), and experiences as probes.…”
Section: The Memory and Identity Nexus In The Homementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The argument developed hereafter is threefold. First, through the recourse of archival practices in geography (Cresswell, ; DeLyser, ; Dwyer & Davies, ), we dwell on creative reuse as an alternative modality to upcycle the materiality and documentary capacities of things, beyond the linear entrapments of historical or functional redundancy. Second, we suggest that aligning the discussion of creative reuse to ongoing conceptualisations of sacred spaces (Holloway, ; Raivo, ; Woods, ) contributes to a better appreciation of their various place‐bound and transient incarnations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As recent research in human geography has so effectively demonstrated, the quotidian detail captured in archive material can prime imaginative engagement and help put forward alternative social memories that challenge current ways of thinking. 15 I employ biographical fragments in a similar way to disrupt, distract and introduce ambiguity within overly straightforward accounts of environmental misadventure at Malakoff Diggins. As Mills points out, 'there is an explicit politics in recovering and restoring fragments', 'embracing the fragmentary and disordered nature of archives can explain the incomplete nature of our lives, states, institutions, and everyday geographies'.…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%