Sharing and storing digital cultural records in Central Australian Indigenous communities

Author:

Vaarzon-Morel PetronellaORCID,Barwick Linda1,Green Jennifer2

Affiliation:

1. The University of Sydney, Australia

2. University of Melbourne, Australia

Abstract

This article considers how Indigenous peoples in Central Australia share and keep digital records of events and cultural knowledge in a period of rapid technological change. To date, research has focused upon the development of digital archives and platforms that reflect Indigenous epistemologies and incorporation of protocols governing access to information. Yet there is scant research on how individuals with little access to such media share and hold—or not, as the case may be—digital cultural information. After surveying current enabling infrastructures in Central Australia, we examine how materials are held and shared when people do not have easy access to databases and the Internet. We analyze examples of practices of sharing materials to draw out issues that arise in managing storage and circulation of cultural records via Universal Serial Bus (USB) flash drives, mobile phones, and other devices. We consider how the affordances of various platforms support, extend, and/or challenge Indigenous socialities and ontologies.

Funder

australian research council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Communication

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