The Ruined Archive

The Ruined Archive
Author: Iain Chambers
Publisher:
Total Pages: 334
Release: 2014
Genre:
ISBN: 9788895194387

La quatrième de couverture indique: "How does the modern museum respond to the movement, migrations and mobilities of the modern world that exceed its practices and premises? The essays in this volume circulate in the constellation of cultural, postcolonial and museum studies to propose a series of intersecting perspectives promoting critical responses to this ongoing interrogation. Memory, the archive, and the politics of display, are unwound from their institutional moorings and allowed to drift into other, frequently non-authorised, accounts of time and space. Called upon to negotiate unplanned encounters with unsuspected actors and the obscured sides of modernity, the museum becomes an experimental space, a laboratory for a cultural democracy yet to come."

In the Ruins of the Reich

In the Ruins of the Reich
Author: Douglas Botting
Publisher: Methuen Publishing
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2005
Genre: Germany
ISBN: 9780413775115

"A portrait of a great European power in chaos, In the Ruins of the Reich is an account of the savage climax of war, and a timely reminder of the terrible cost of the occupation."--Jacket.

The Archive of Loss

The Archive of Loss
Author: Maura Finkelstein
Publisher: Duke University Press
Total Pages: 271
Release: 2019-03-21
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1478004606

Mumbai's textile industry is commonly but incorrectly understood to be an extinct relic of the past. In The Archive of Loss Maura Finkelstein examines what it means for textile mill workers—who are assumed not to exist—to live and work during a period of deindustrialization. Finkelstein shows how mills are ethnographic archives of the city where documents, artifacts, and stories exist in the buildings and in the bodies of workers. Workers' pain, illnesses, injuries, and exhaustion narrate industrial decline; the ways in which they live in tenements exist outside and resist the values expounded by modernity; and the rumors and untruths they share about textile worker strikes and a mill fire help them make sense of the industry's survival. In outlining this archive's contents, Finkelstein shows how mills, which she conceptualizes as lively ruins, become a lens through which to challenge, reimagine, and alter ways of thinking about the past, present, and future in Mumbai and beyond.

The Lost Archive

The Lost Archive
Author: Marina Rustow
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 620
Release: 2020-01-14
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0691189528

A compelling look at the Fatimid caliphate's robust culture of documentation The lost archive of the Fatimid caliphate (909–1171) survived in an unexpected place: the storage room, or geniza, of a synagogue in Cairo, recycled as scrap paper and deposited there by medieval Jews. Marina Rustow tells the story of this extraordinary find, inviting us to reconsider the longstanding but mistaken consensus that before 1500 the dynasties of the Islamic Middle East produced few documents, and preserved even fewer. Beginning with government documents before the Fatimids and paper’s westward spread across Asia, Rustow reveals a millennial tradition of state record keeping whose very continuities suggest the strength of Middle Eastern institutions, not their weakness. Tracing the complex routes by which Arabic documents made their way from Fatimid palace officials to Jewish scribes, the book provides a rare window onto a robust culture of documentation and archiving not only comparable to that of medieval Europe, but, in many cases, surpassing it. Above all, Rustow argues that the problem of archives in the medieval Middle East lies not with the region’s administrative culture, but with our failure to understand preindustrial documentary ecology. Illustrated with stunning examples from the Cairo Geniza, this compelling book advances our understanding of documents as physical artifacts, showing how the records of the Fatimid caliphate, once recovered, deciphered, and studied, can help change our thinking about the medieval Islamicate world and about premodern polities more broadly.

Anatolica

Anatolica
Author: Edwin John Davis
Publisher:
Total Pages: 470
Release: 1874
Genre: Turkey
ISBN:

Myth and Archive

Myth and Archive
Author: Roberto González Echevarría
Publisher: Duke University Press
Total Pages: 276
Release: 1998
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780822321941

Discusses the theory of the origin and evolution of the Latin American narrative and the emergence of the modern novel.

Archive as Detour

Archive as Detour
Author: Sau Wai Vennes Cheng
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 252
Release:
Genre:
ISBN: 9819724880

The Love of Ruins

The Love of Ruins
Author: Scott Cutler Shershow
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2017-02-21
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1438465122

Today, H. P. Lovecraft is both more popular and controversial than ever: the influence of his "Cthulhu mythos" is everywhere in popular culture, his cosmic pessimism has reemerged as a major theme in contemporary philosophy, and his racism continues to spark controversy in the media. The Love of Ruins takes a fresh look at a figure widely acknowledged as the father of modern horror or "weird" fiction. In these pages, Lovecraft emerges not as the atheist and nihilist he is often claimed to be, but as a kind of "psychonaut" and mystic whose stories, through their own imaginative rigor, expose the intellectual bankruptcy of their author's racism. The Love of Ruins is itself written in the form of letters, in order to do homage to Lovecraft's love of the form of the personal letter (he wrote more than 100,000), and to emulate Lovecraft's lifetime practice of thinking-as-corresponding.