Difference between revisions of "Resources"
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* Marika Cifor, Stacy Wood (2017), [[Media:Critical_Feminism_in_the_Archives.pdf|Critical Feminism in the Archives]] | * Marika Cifor, Stacy Wood (2017), [[Media:Critical_Feminism_in_the_Archives.pdf|Critical Feminism in the Archives]] | ||
* Rodney G.S. Carter (2006), [[Media:Of_Things_Said_and_Unsaid.pdf|Of Things Said and Unsaid: Power, Archival Silences, and Power in Silence*]] | * Rodney G.S. Carter (2006), [[Media:Of_Things_Said_and_Unsaid.pdf|Of Things Said and Unsaid: Power, Archival Silences, and Power in Silence*]] | ||
− | * Nicole Robert (2014), [[Media: |Getting intersectional in museums]] | + | * Nicole Robert (2014), [[Media:Getting_Intersectional_in_Museums.pdf|Getting intersectional in museums]] |
== Decolonisation à la belge == | == Decolonisation à la belge == |
Revision as of 11:00, 26 June 2019
Archive histories otherwise
- Achille Mbembe (2002), The Power of the Archive and its Limits. In: Hamilton C., Harris V., Taylor J., Pickover M., Reid G., Saleh R. (eds) Refiguring the Archive. Springer, Dordrecht
- Elizabeth Povinelli, "The Woman on the Other Side of the Wall: Archiving the Otherwise in Postcolonial Digital Archives," differences 22, no. 1 (2011): 146-171
- Ann Laura Stoler (2002), "Colonial archive and the arts of governance"
- Stuart Hall (2001) Constituting an archive. In: Third text
- Paul Basu, Ferdinand de Jong (2014), Utopian archives, decolonial affordances
- Walter D. Mignolo (2009), Epistemic disobedience, independent thought and de-colonial freedom. In: Theory, Culture & Society
- The opposite of archiving: Zoe Leonard, Fae Richards, and the Watermelon Woman (the idea of deconstructing the current system of archive to rebuild another one)
- Geoff Cox, Nicolas Malevé, Michael Murtaugh (2014), Archiving the Data-body: human and nonhuman agency in the documents of Kurenniemi
- Marika Cifor, Stacy Wood (2017), Critical Feminism in the Archives
- Rodney G.S. Carter (2006), Of Things Said and Unsaid: Power, Archival Silences, and Power in Silence*
- Nicole Robert (2014), Getting intersectional in museums
Decolonisation à la belge
- Matthias De Groof & Mona Mpembele, The Palimpsest of the Africa Museum (avec intervention de Toma Muteba Luntumbue)
- Neika Lehman, Maddee Clark (2018), The Unbearable Hotness of Decolonisation
- Jeanne Coppens, Benjamine Laini Lusalusa, Léa Grégoire (2018) Another Tervuren - Renovation as reparation?, KUMBUKA - Zine Décolonial
- Bambi Cueppens, Mark groet 's morgens de dingen (2005)
Techno-decolonialism + intersectional technologies
- Jessica Ogden, Susan Halford, Les Carr, Graeme Earl (....), This is For Everyone? Steps towards decolonizing the Web. (questions the notion of openness as 'universal good' and situates the web as a socio-technical structure)
- Panel discussion: Discrimination and big data
- Roel Roscam Abbing, Peggy Pierrot (2018) Modifying the Universal. (travail questionant le traitement de diversité via Unicode)
- Geraldine Juarez, Intercolonial Technogalactic (2016) https://geraldine.juarez.se/publications/Intercolonial.pdf
- Syed Mustafa Ali (2016), A brief introduction to decolonial computing
- Kavitah Philip, Lili Irani, Paul Dourish (2012), Postcolonial Computing: A Tactical Survey
- Wolfgang Ernst (2016), Radically De-Historicising the Archive. Decolonising Archival Memory from the Supremacy of Historical Discourse
- Wendy Hui Kyong Chun (2009), Race and/as Technology; or, How to Do Things to Race
- Zach Blas & Micha Carde, “Imaginary computational systems: queer technologies and transreal aesthetics”, AI & Soc, August 2015
- Jacob Gaboury, Critical Unmaking: Toward a Queer Computation
- Noah Tsika (2016), CompuQueer: Protocological Constraints, Algorithmic Streamlining, and the Search for Queer Methods Online
- Roopika Risam (2015), Beyond the Margins: Intersectionality and the Digital Humanities