Provocations on the pleasures of archived paper

  • Maryanne Dever
Keywords: archival research, materiality, personal papers

Abstract

Digital formats are often popularly imagined to spell the ‘end’ of paper. In this essay I pose a series of questions about the importance of materiality for how researchers understand and work with archived paper documents. Drawing examples from research among literary papers and personal correspondence, I highlight the ways in which paper traditionally ‘disappears’ from the researcher’s view and ask whether the conditions of the digital turn may in fact provide for a return to ‘thinking through paper’.

Author Biography

Maryanne Dever

Maryanne Dever is an Associate Professor in the School of Humanities and Social Science at the University of Newcastle and was previously Director of the Centre for Women's Studies and Gender Research at Monash University. She is a co-author of The Intimate Archive: Journeys Through Private Papers (National Library of Australia, 2009) and her current research explores questions of archives, intimacy and materiality. She is the co-convenor (with Linda Morra) of the ‘Archive Futures’ research network.

Published
2013-10-17
How to Cite
Dever M. (2013) “Provocations on the pleasures of archived paper”, Archives & Manuscripts, 41(3), pp. 173-182. doi: 10.1080/01576895.2013.841550.
Section
Articles