Zines as community archive

Author:

Baker SarahORCID,Cantillon ZelmarieORCID

Abstract

AbstractZines are self-published, do-it-yourself booklets that have a long history as tools for activism in social movements. While archival studies has already explored the collection and preservation of zines as cultural artefacts, this article explores the capacity for zines to act as a form of community archive. The article examines See You at the Paradise, a zine co-created with Norfolk Island community members for a research project focused on Kingston and Arthur’s Vale Historic Area. Drawing on Michelle Caswell’s six principles of community archive discourse—participation, shared stewardship, multiplicity, activism, reflexivity, valuing affect—we analyse the extent to which zines and zine-making, as product and process, can be understood as community archive. In doing so, we propose collaborative reminiscence as a seventh principle. The article finds that zines, as community archive, work to strengthen the presence of marginalised voices in dominant historical narratives while also offering an important resource for community-building and political resistance.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Western Sydney University

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Library and Information Sciences,History

Reference47 articles.

1. Australian Bureau of Statistics (2016) 2016 census quickstats: Norfolk Island. https://quickstats.censusdata.abs.gov.au/census_services/getproduct/census/2016/quickstat/SSC90004?opendocument. Accessed 23 Sept 2021

2. Australian Bureau of Statistics (2019) Understanding ancestry in the Norfolk Island population. https://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/Lookup/by%20Subject/2900.0~2016~Main%20Features~Understanding%20ancestry%20in%20the%20Norfolk%20Island%20population~10142. Accessed 23 Sept 2021

3. Baker S, Cantillon Z (eds) (2021) See you at the Paradise/Ketch yorlye daun Paradise. https://reimaginingkavha.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/see_you_at_the_paradise_zine.pdf. Accessed 20 Sept 2021

4. Baker, Cantillon Z, Evans C (eds) (2021) Mais Daun’taun, volume 1. https://reimaginingkavha.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/mais_dauntaun_volume1_zine.pdf. Accessed 1 Feb 2022

5. Bastian JA (2013) The records of memory, the archives of identity: celebrations, texts and archival sensibilities. Arch Sci 13:121–131

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