Collecting the easily missed stories: digital participatory microhistory and the South Asian American Digital Archive

  • Michelle Caswell
  • Samip Mallick
Keywords: digital archives, digital participatory microhistory, community archives

Abstract

This paper defines and delineates the concept of participatory microhistory through an examination of the South Asian American Digital Archive’s First Days Project, a community-based online project that solicits short audio, video and written narratives about South Asians immigrants’ first day in the United States. First, this paper provides a brief overview of the history of the South Asian American Digital Archive and the First Days Project. Next, this paper highlights three important functions filled by participatory microhistory projects: they generate new records that represent perspectives not commonly found in archives, they convey an important sense of emotion and affect, and they effectively solicit community participation in the archival endeavour. Throughout, this paper explores participatory microhistory projects as tools to harness technology for community empowerment and build support for archives.

Author Biographies

Michelle Caswell

Michelle Caswell is Assistant Professor of Archival Studies in the Department of Information Studies at UCLA and a co-founder and board member of the South Asian American Digital Archive. She is the author of Archiving the Unspeakable: Silence, Memory, and the Photographic Record in Cambodia, as well as numerous articles in Archival Science, American Archivist, Archivaria.

Samip Mallick

Samip Mallick is the executive director and co-founder of the South Asian American Digital Archive.

Published
2014-03-20
How to Cite
Caswell M. and Mallick S. (2014) “Collecting the easily missed stories: digital participatory microhistory and the South Asian American Digital Archive”, Archives & Manuscripts, 42(1), pp. 73-86. doi: 10.1080/01576895.2014.880931.