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Basements and Attics, Closets and Cyberspace

Explorations in Canadian Women's Archives

Linda M. Morra, editor, and Jessica Schagerl, editor

Life Writing Series

 

Order online and receive a 25% discount

$85.00 Hardcover, 355 pp.

ISBN13: 978-1-55458-632-5

Release Date: Forthcoming August 2012

 

   

Book Description

Women’s letters and memoirs were until recently considered to have little historical significance. Many of these materials have disappeared or remain unarchived, often dismissed as ephemera and relegated to basements, attics, closets, and, increasingly, cyberspace rather than public institutions. This collection showcases the range of critical debates that animate thinking about women’s archives in Canada.

The essays in Basements and Attics, Closets and Cyberspace consider a series of central questions: What are the challenges that affect archival work about women in Canada today? What are some of the ethical dilemmas that arise over the course of archival research? How do researchers read and make sense of the materials available to them? How does one approach the shifting, unstable forms of new technologies? What principles inform the decisions not only to research the lives of women but to create archival deposits? The contributors focus on how a supple research process might allow for greater engagement with unique archival forms and critical absences in narratives of past and present.

From questions of acquisition, deposition, and preservation to challenges related to the interpretation of material, the contributors track at various stages how fonds are created (or sidestepped) in response to national and other imperatives and to feminist commitments; how archival material is organized, restricted, accessed, and interpreted; how alternative and immediate archives might be conceived and approached; and how exchanges might be read when there are peculiar lacunae—missing or fragmented documents, or gaps in communication—that then require imaginative leaps on the part of the researcher.

About Linda M. Morra, and Jessica Schagerl

Linda M. Morra, an associate professor at Bishop’s University, specializes in Canadian literature and Canadian studies. Her research focuses on women and the publishing industry in Canada. Her publications include Corresponding Influence: Selected Letters of Emily Carr and Ira Dilworth (2006), Troubling Tricksters: Revisioning Critical Conversations (co-editor with Deanna Reder, WLU Press, 2010), and an edition of Jane Rule’s autobiography, Taking My Life (2011).

Jessica Schagerl’s research focuses on Canadian studies, drawing heavily on archival material; she is also invested in questions of professional concern, including mentoring and the futures of arts and humanities. She is the alumni and development officer for the Faculty of Arts and Humanities at the University of Western Ontario.

Basements and Attics, Closets and Cyberspace

Table of Contents

Related interest

Biography/memoir

Life writing

Women's studies

By the same editor

Troubling Tricksters: Revisioning Critical Conversations, Deanna Reder, editor, and Linda M. Morra, editor