Opening archives: respectful repatriation

Articles
Thème de la ressource: 
Litiges, retours et restitutions
Type de ressource: 
Bibliographie - Articles
Auteur: 
CHRISTEN Kimberly
Editeur: 
American Archivist
Date: 
2011
Pages / Longueur: 
26 p.
Langue de publication: 
Anglais

In the last twenty years, many collecting institutions have heeded the calls by indigenous activists to integrate indigenous models and knowledge into mainstream practices. The digital terrain poses both possibilities and problems for indigenous peoples as they seek to manage,
revive, circulate, and create new cultural heritage within overlapping colonial/postcolonial histories and oftentimes-binary public debates about access in a digital age. While digital technologies allow for items to be repatriated quickly, circulated widely, and annotated endlessly, these same technologies pose challenges to some indigenous communities who wish to add their expert voices to public collections and also maintain some traditional cultural protocols for the viewing, circulation, and reproduction of some materials. This case study examines one collaborative archival project aimed at digitally repatriating and reciprocally curating cultural heritage materials of the Plateau tribes in the Pacific Northwest.