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Archive
LABEL_RESOURCE_EDITORS
LABEL_RESOURCE_PUBINFO
London 2006
LABEL_RESOURCE_PUBLISHER
Whitechapel Gallery
LABEL_RESOURCE_COPYRIGHTYEAR
2006
LABEL_RESOURCE_SIZE
207 p.
LABEL_RESOURCE_ISBN
978-0-85488-148-2
LABEL_RESOURCE_SHELFMARK
002688
LABEL_RESOURCE_DESCRIPTION

In the modern era, the archive—official or personal—has become the most significant means by which historical knowledge and memory are collected, stored, and recovered. The archive has thus emerged as a key site of inquiry in such fields as anthropology, critical theory, history, and, especially, recent art.

Traces and testimonies of such events as World War II and ensuing conflicts, the emergence of the postcolonial era, and the fall of communism have each provoked a reconsideration of the authority given the archive—no longer viewed as a neutral, transparent site of record but as a contested subject and medium in itself.

This volume surveys the full diversity of our transformed theoretical and critical notions of the archive—as idea and as physical presence—from Freud's "mystic writing pad" to Derrida's "archive fever"; from Christian Boltanski's first autobiographical explorations of archival material in the 1960s to the practice of artists as various as Susan Hiller, Ilya Kabakov, Thomas Hirshhorn, Renée Green, and The Atlas Group in the present.

LABEL_RESOURCE_PARTS
Introduction: Art and the Archive
Note Upon The Mystic Writing-Pad, 1925
Research and Presentation of All That Remains of My Childhood 1944-1950, ...
The Historical a priori and the Archive, 1969
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