The archive has been portrayed by historians for many years as a ‘magical’ place of neutral enquiry. In fact, it has historically been used in the perpetuation of many abuses by the state and continues to play a role in privileging some narratives above others at the expense of disadvantaged groups within society. Increasingly, a new breed of activist archivists are paying attention to what can be done to correct the imbalances within the archival record.
Tag: historical activism
Tags
activism
Apocalypse Then and Now
archives
Black History
Brexit
Britain
British empire
colonialism
communism
Conference
covid-19
education
empire
family history
fascism
featured
feminism
gender
higher education
history
history of medicine
History Workshop
History Workshop Archive
immigration
imperialism
India
Ireland
Labour history
London
memory
migration
nationalism
oral history
protest
public history
queer history
race
racism
radical history
Radical Objects
Second World War
slavery
socialism
women's history
working class
Categories
- (Un)Silenced: Institutional Sexual Violence (6)
- Archive (20)
- Desert Island Histories (4)
- Events & News (140)
- Features (90)
- Global Feminisms (3)
- Historians' Watch (131)
- Histories of the Present (334)
- History Acts (3)
- History at Large (71)
- History of History Workshop (50)
- History of Sexuality (5)
- History Workshop Journal companion piece (11)
- History Workshop Online (12)
- History Workshop Podcast (41)
- History Workshop World Cup (7)
- Interviews (2)
- Local History (9)
- Moving People (6)
- Radical Books (22)
- Radical Histories Conference (6)
- Radical Objects (91)
- Reviews & Comment (28)
- Roundtable (13)
- Teaching & Learning (16)
- The Political Environment (6)
- The Practice of History (10)
- The Strike That Made Me (10)
- Virtual Special Issue (10)
- Whose Streets? (9)
- Why My Research Matters (7)