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Archives & Things

Archives & Things

By Melissa J. Nelson

Archives & Things is a podcast dedicated to exploring archival practice in the Canadian landscape. It brings to the forefront the experiences of Black people who create, work with, and care for archival materials. Your host, Melissa J. Nelson, is an archivist, researcher, writer, and educator based in Toronto, Ontario. In these episodes, Melissa will be in conversation with members of her network who come from different disciplines. What connects them is their interest in Black memory, archives, and history. Learn more about Melissa at https://melissajnelson.com/.
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22 | Dr. Meredith D. Clark, Northeastern University

Archives & ThingsApr 05, 2024

00:00
23:14
22 | Dr. Meredith D. Clark, Northeastern University
Apr 05, 202423:14
21 | Kelann Currie-Williams, Concordia University

21 | Kelann Currie-Williams, Concordia University

Summary:

In this episode, I welcome Kelann Currie-Williams, lens-based artist and doctoral student in the Interdisciplinary Humanities Program at Concordia University. Kelann joins us to speak about the poetics of the archives.  

Episode Resources:

Kelann Currie-Williams. (2021). “Prolonging the Afterimage: Looking at and Talking about Photographs of Black Montreal.” Concordia University. https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/988140/13/CurrieWilliams_MA_S2021.pdf 

Kelann Currie-Williams (2021). “Makers and Keepers: Two Lives, Through Photographs.” Canadian Journal of History, 56(3). https://utpjournals.press/doi/full/10.3138/cjh.56-3-2021-0044

Patrick Lejtenyi (September 29, 2020). Concordia undergrads explore Montreal's Black history through the Negro Community Centre Archives. https://www.concordia.ca/news/stories/2020/09/29/concordia-undergrads-explore-montreals-black-history-through-the-negro-community-centre-archives.html 

Tina M. Campt. (2017). Listening to Images. Duke University Press. https://www.dukeupress.edu/listening-to-images 

Saidiya Hartman. (2019).  Wayward lives, beautiful experiments: Intimate histories of riotous Black girls, troublesome women, and queer radicals. WW Norton & Company. https://wwnorton.com/books/9780393357622

Melissa J. Nelson. (November 9, 2023) Black Sound and the Archives. https://melissajnelson.com/explore/information-management/black-sound-and-the-archives/ 

Vance Woods. (Jan 16, 2023). “There is a tangible tension between what is held in Caribbean archives and what is remembered in Caribbean communities”: Interview with Stanley H. Griffin, of the University of the West Indies (pt. 1). https://www.archivozmagazine.org/en/interview-with-stanley-h-griffin-pt-1/#:~:text=marketing%20marketing-,%E2%80%9CThere%20is%20a%20tangible%20tension%20between%20what%20is%20held%20in,1

Stay Connected:

If you enjoyed listening to this podcast you can follow, rate, and share it on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Amazon.

To learn more about my work, visit my blog at ⁠https://melissajnelson.com⁠. You can connect with me on ⁠LinkedIn⁠, ⁠Instagram⁠, and ⁠Twitter⁠ or contact me at melissa.j.nelson@outlook.com. 

Mar 12, 202444:35
20 | Dr. Elizabeth Shaffer, University of British Columbia, School of Information

20 | Dr. Elizabeth Shaffer, University of British Columbia, School of Information


Summary:

Welcome to the opener for season 3! In this episode, I welcome Dr. Elizabeth Shaffer, a critical archives scholar and Assistant Professor at the University of British Columbia’s School of Information. Elizabeth joins us to speak about her research on the intersections of Black memory production and technology.

Episode Resources:

Association of Canadian Archivists. “Archives Spotlight Melissa J. Nelson: Black Memory Collective.” https://archivists.ca/Blog/13316265  

Dr. Cheryl Thompson. MOBA: Artists and Archivists in Dialogue. Toronto. September 21-22, 2023. https://drive.google.com/file/d/176y5F7mX6PIFbK-EXS-fP5b4fTQqJaNX/view?usp=sharing 

Transformative Memory Digital Archive. https://omeka.irshdc.ubc.ca/s/Transformative-Memory/page/welcome 

Melissa J. Nelson. “Reclaiming the Narrative: Black Archives at the Archives of Ontario.” Niagara Falls Museums. February 8, 2024. https://youtu.be/TDmrmDgaE68?si=pCt6pBEHzB-zUfhn 

Christina Sharpe. “In the Wake: On Blackness and Being.” Duke University Press. 2016. https://www.dukeupress.edu/in-the-wake 

Katherine McKittrick. “Dear Science and Other Stories.” Duke University Press. 2021. https://www.dukeupress.edu/dear-science-and-other-stories 

Tonia Sutherland. “Resurrecting the Black Body: Race and the Digital Afterlife.” University of California Press. 2023. https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520383876/resurrecting-the-black-body 

Ehiko Odeh. Golden Beauty Supply. 2024. https://designto.org/event/golden-beauty-supply/ [video: https://www.instagram.com/p/C3sinahtTDr/]

Ehiko Odeh. Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow. 2024. https://www.rhpl.ca/hair-today-gone-tomorrow-exhibit [video: https://www.instagram.com/p/C22JkX_Lg_q/]

Stay Connected:

If you enjoyed listening to this podcast you can follow, rate, and share it on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Amazon.

To learn more about my work, visit my blog at https://melissajnelson.com. You can connect with me on LinkedIn, Instagram, and Twitter or contact me at melissa.j.nelson@outlook.com. 

Feb 23, 202445:25
19 | BONUS: Elaine Young & Cody Groat, CCUNESCO

19 | BONUS: Elaine Young & Cody Groat, CCUNESCO

Summary:

It's the last episode of the year. In this bonus episode,  I welcome Elaine Young, Program Officer, Communication and Information at the Canadian Commission for UNESCO (CCUNESCO) and Cody Groat, Chair of the Canada Advisory Committee of CCUNESCO. Elaine and Cody join us to speak about the Canada Memory of the World Register, which promotes the rich diversity of the country’s documentary heritage.

Episode Resources:

Canada Memory of the World Register. https://en.ccunesco.ca/our-priorities/memory-of-the-world 

Cody Groat. (May 24, 2023). Guardians of our Knowledge. CCUNESCO. https://en.ccunesco.ca/idealab/guardians-of-our-knowledge-memory-of-the-world 

Dorothy Berry. (2023). The Dorothy Berry Collection of What Are Black Archives, 2023. https://syllabusproject.org/what-are-black-archives/

Sheryl Assam. (September 22, 2023). Quilting exhibition celebrates Nova Scotia’s Black communities. Broadview. https://broadview.org/secret-codes-quilts-nova-scotia/ 

Alison Duke & Ngardy Conteh. (2018). Archiving Winston LaRose. CBC. https://www.cbc.ca/cbcdocspov/features/archiving-winston-larose 

Sean Smith. (July 12, 2023). Collective Healing in our Black Archives. InsideOPS. https://drive.google.com/file/d/17ajJfo5jFsS1eXtquzWFMlIsn8iuNX4j/view?usp=sharing 

Stay Connected:

If you enjoyed listening to this podcast you can follow, rate, and share it on Anchor, Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

To learn more about my work, visit my blog at https://melissajnelson.com. You can connect with me on LinkedIn and Twitter or contact me at melissa.j.nelson@outlook.com. 


Nov 07, 202327:07
18 | Désirée Rochat, COHDS

18 | Désirée Rochat, COHDS

Summary:

In this episode, I welcome Désirée Rochat, a Black memory worker and postdoctoral fellow with the Centre for Oral History and Digital Storytelling (COHDS) and the Department of History at Concordia University. Désirée joins us to speak about her initiatives to preserve and promote Black community archives in Quebec. 

Episode Resources:

Désirée Rochat. (2022). Cultivating Black diasporic memories and communities through community archiving. In Cindy Maguire and Ann Holt (eds.), Arts and Culture in Global Development Practice. Routledge. https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9781003148203-8/cultivating-black-diasporic-memories-communities-community-archiving-d%C3%A9sir%C3%A9e-rochat 

Jeannette  Allis Bastian. (2003). Owning Memory: How a Caribbean Community Lost Its Archives and Found Its History. Libraries Unlimited.https://www.amazon.ca/Owning-Memory-Caribbean-Community-Archives/dp/031332008X 

Kimberly Christen & Jane Anderson. (2019). Toward slow archives. Archival Science, 19(2). https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10502-019-09307-x 

Zakiya Collier and Tonia Sutherland. (2021). Black Archival Practice. The Black Scholar. https://www.theblackscholar.org/call-for-papers/black-archival-practice/ 

Stay Connected:

If you enjoyed listening to this podcast you can follow, rate, and share it on Anchor, Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

To learn more about my work, visit my blog at https://melissajnelson.com. You can connect with me on LinkedIn and Twitter or contact me at melissa.j.nelson@outlook.com. 

Sep 16, 202342:47
17 | Nana aba Duncan, Carleton University

17 | Nana aba Duncan, Carleton University

Summary:

In this episode, I welcome Nana aba Duncan, Associate Professor and Carty Chair in Journalism, Diversity and Inclusion Studies at Carleton University. Nana aba joins us to speak about her plans to launch the Mary Ann Shadd Cary Centre for Journalism and Belonging.

Episode Resources: 

Mary Ann Shadd Cary Centre for Journalism and Belonging. https://view.genial.ly/61e58f69c08f6f0ceda67f2a

Diversity Survey. The Canadian Association of Journalists. https://caj.ca/programs/diversity-survey/ 

Sam Winn. (April 24, 2017). The Hubris of Neutrality in Archives. https://medium.com/on-archivy/the-hubris-of-neutrality-in-archives-8df6b523fe9f 

Elvia Arroyo-Ramírez, Jasmine Jones, Shannon O'Neill, Holly A. Smith. (2021). An Introduction to Radical Empathy in Archival Practice. In Elvia Arroyo-Ramírez, Jasmine Jones, Shannon O’Neill, and Holly Smith (eds.), Radical Empathy in Archival Practice. Special issue, Journal of Critical Library and Information Studies 3, no. 2. https://journals.litwinbooks.com/index.php/jclis/article/view/171 

Stay Connected:

If you enjoyed listening to this podcast you can follow, rate, and share it on Anchor, Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

To learn more about my work, visit my blog at https://melissajnelson.com. You can connect with me on LinkedIn and Twitter or contact me at melissa.j.nelson@outlook.com. 


Aug 26, 202322:18
16 | Dr. Funké Aladejebi, University of Toronto

16 | Dr. Funké Aladejebi, University of Toronto

Summary:

In this episode, I welcome Dr. Funké Aladejebi, Assistant Professor in the Department of History at the University of Toronto. Funké joins us to speak about her work conducting oral histories with Black women educators. 

Episode Resources:

Dr. Funké Aladejebi (November 4, 2020). Seeing Themselves: Race, Education and Black Life in Canada. McMaster Humanities. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PdTUFIRaIDw 

Dr. Funké Aladejebi. (January 19, 2021). Liberatory Pedagogies: Black Women Teachers in Ontario. Amherstburg Freedom Museum. https://youtu.be/VKB6u-Wl4g4 

Funké Aladejebi. (2021). Schooling the System: A History of Black Women Teachers. McGill-Queen’s University Press. https://www.mqup.ca/schooling-the-system-products-9780228005391.php 

Funké Aladejebi. (2022). “I don’t know if I should say this”: Black Women, Oral History, and contesting the Great White North. In Michele A. Johnson and Funké Aladejebi. (Eds.), Unsettling the Great White North: Black Canadian History. University of Toronto Press. https://utorontopress.com/9781487529178/unsettling-the-great-white-north/ 

Stay Connected:

If you enjoyed listening to this podcast you can follow, rate, and share it on Anchor, Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

To learn more about my work, visit my blog at https://melissajnelson.com. You can connect with me on LinkedIn and Twitter or contact me at melissa.j.nelson@outlook.com. 


Jul 07, 202330:04
15 | Martina Douglas, University of Toronto, Faculty of Information
Jun 14, 202331:14
14 | Dr. Mark V. Campbell, Northside Hip Hop Archive
May 26, 202330:44
13 | Olivia Wong, Toronto Metropolitan University Libraries

13 | Olivia Wong, Toronto Metropolitan University Libraries


Summary:

In this episode, I welcome Olivia Wong, Special Collections Curatorial Specialist at Toronto Metropolitan University Libraries. Olivia joins us to speak about her anti-racist description work, which improves descriptions for those harmed by white supremacy and represents their histories more equitably and accurately.

Episode Resources:

Alison Skyrme, Cheryl Thompson, Emilie Jabouin, and Olivia Wong. (April 10, 2022). Canadian Blackface Culture: Confronting Racist Materials in Canadian Archives. Toronto Metropolitan University.  https://rshare.library.ryerson.ca/articles/presentation/Canadian_Blackface_Culture_Confronting_Racist_Materials_in_Canadian_Archives/15137016 

Archives for Black Lives in Philadelphia’s Anti-Racist Description Working Group (October 2019). Archives for Black Lives in Philadelphia: Anti-Racist Description Resources https://archivesforblacklives.files.wordpress.com/2019/10/ardr_final.pdf

Cheryl Thompson & Emilie Jabouin. (February 3, 2021). Blackface in the Kodak Archive, Ryerson’s Special Collections: Context for Reading ‘Racist’ Images, Toronto Metropolitan University Archives & Special Collections. https://library.torontomu.ca/asc/2021/02/blackface-in-the-kodak-archive-ryersons-special-collections-context-for-reading-racist-images/

Melissa J. Nelson. Description and Access for Anti-Black Archival Materials. Archives Association of Ontario. https://aao-archivists.ca/event-5228234 

Jessica Tai. (2021). Cultural Humility as a Framework for Anti-Oppressive Archival Description, in “Radical Empathy in Archival Practice,” eds. Elvia Arroyo-Ramírez, Jasmine Jones, Shannon O’Neill, and Holly Smith. Special issue, Journal of Critical Library and Information Studies 3, no. 2. https://journals.litwinbooks.com/index.php/jclis/article/view/120 

Stay Connected:

If you enjoyed listening to this podcast you can follow, rate, and share it on ⁠Anchor⁠, ⁠Spotify⁠ and ⁠Apple Podcasts⁠.

To learn more about my work, visit my blog at ⁠https://melissajnelson.com⁠. You can connect with me on ⁠LinkedIn⁠ and ⁠Twitter⁠ or contact me at ⁠melissa.j.nelson@outlook.com. ⁠

Apr 19, 202317:17
12 | Tonya Sutherland-Stewart, Jackson Park Project

12 | Tonya Sutherland-Stewart, Jackson Park Project

Summary:

In this episode, I welcome Tonya Sutherland-Stewart, head of archive development and researcher for the Jackson Park Project. Tonya joins us to speak about the development of this digital archive of Emancipation Day celebrations in Windsor, Ontario. 

Episode Resources:

Audra Gray (Producer) & Katarzyna Kochany (Director). (2019). Journey Back to Jackson Park. CBC Gem. https://cbcgem.app/hZ36RNiJek1emeL19 

Jackson Park Project. (Sep 21, 2022). Culture Days 2022: Savouring Food & Freedom Extended Version. YoutTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FwHCoVxNWZQ&t=7s 

The Jackson Park Project [@jacksonparkproject]. (n.d.). Instagram profile. Retrieved from, https://instagram.com/jacksonparkproject?igshid=MDE2OWE1N2Q= 

Royal Ontario Museum. (Jul 27, 2020). Emancipation Day: Canada’s Past, Present & Future. YoutTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fA4f-lmpm9w&t=1s 

Royal Ontario Museum. (Aug 10, 2020). Emancipation Day: The Greatest Freedom Show on Earth. YoutTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DDKslDG-ujk&t=17s 

Stay Connected:

If you enjoyed listening to this podcast you can follow, rate, and share it on ⁠Anchor⁠, ⁠Spotify⁠ and ⁠Apple Podcasts⁠.

To learn more about my work, visit my blog at ⁠https://melissajnelson.com⁠. You can connect with me on ⁠LinkedIn⁠ and ⁠Twitter⁠ or contact me at ⁠melissa.j.nelson@outlook.com. ⁠


Mar 18, 202342:12
11 | Dr. Kristin Moriah, Queen’s University

11 | Dr. Kristin Moriah, Queen’s University

Summary:

Welcome to the opener for season 2! In this episode, I welcome Dr. Kristin Moriah, Assistant Professor of African American Literature and Culture in the English Department at Queen’s University. Kristin joins us to speak about her work expanding research on Black political organizing in Canada and the United States.

Episode Resources:

Colored Conventions Project. (n.d.). University of Delaware. https://coloredconventions.org/

Douglass Day 2023 featuring the Papers of Mary Ann Shadd Cary. February 14, 2023. https://douglassday.org/

Melissa J. Nelson, Lopez Matthews and Sean Smith. Roundtable: Activating Archives and Anniversaries. Mary Ann Shadd Cary in the Here and Now Symposium. Penn State’s Center for Black Digital Research. Virtual. October 2, 2021. https://bwoaproject.org/events/shadd-cary/shadd-cary-symposium/

Stay Connected:

If you enjoyed listening to this podcast you can follow, rate, and share it on ⁠Anchor⁠, ⁠Spotify⁠ and ⁠Apple Podcasts⁠.

To learn more about my work, visit my blog at ⁠https://melissajnelson.com⁠. You can connect with me on ⁠LinkedIn⁠ and ⁠Twitter⁠ or contact me at ⁠melissa.j.nelson@outlook.com. ⁠

Feb 08, 202316:30
10 | BONUS: Your Questions Answered

10 | BONUS: Your Questions Answered

Summary:

It's the last episode of the year. In this bonus episode, I answer questions from you, the listener. The following are the submitted questions:

Q1: Can you talk a little bit about why it's important to document and preserve racist history & archival records?

Q2: Is there an extent to which archive-holding institutions need to do a better job of supporting archivists (e.g., mental health supports), and particularly BIPOC  archivists, who may be working with these materials?

Q3: In your own training, were there courses that dealt with the topic of racist materials that helped to prepare you for the possibility of working with them?

Q4: Do these same principles apply to museum collections? I once worked at a museum that had a machine intended to do a job typically done by Chinese workers. The machine was called "The Iron Chink." Displaying it was obviously controversial. The museum took the stance that "We are not condoning this by exhibiting it. This is history."

Q5: Do you have colleagues at other archives in Canada who are also taking an anti-racist approach to the collections they work with? Do many archives have specific policies around working with explicitly racist materials?

Q6: As a Black researcher and academic, how do you explain the difficulty of searching for Black life in colonial archives to white archivists who don’t have that understanding?

Q7 How do you negotiate the place of Black researchers and Black Canadian history when the gatekeepers to memory are white settlers?

Episode Resources:

Archives for Black Lives in Philadelphia Anti-Racist Description Working Group. (2019). Anti-Racist Description Resources. https://archivesforblacklives.files.wordpress.com/2019/10/ardr_final.pdf

Archives of Ontario. Statement on Language and Description. http://www.archives.gov.on.ca/en/access/statement_language_description.aspx

Bashir Mohamed. (September 7, 2018).Calgary’s Unknown Civil Rights Champion. The Sprawl. https://www.sprawlcalgary.com/calgarys-unknown-civil-rights-hero

David Pilgrim (2005). Why I collect racist objects. Jim Crow Museum, Ferris State University. https://www.ferris.edu/HTMLS/news/jimcrow/collect.htm

Katie Sloan, Jennifer Vanderfluit and Jennifer Douglas. (2019). Not ‘Just My Problem to Handle’: Emerging Themes on Secondary Trauma and Archivists. Journal of Contemporary Archival Studies. 6 (20). https://elischolar.library.yale.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1090&context=jcas

Melissa J. Nelson. Work with me. https://melissajnelson.com/contact/

Stay Connected:

If you enjoyed listening to this podcast you can follow, rate, and share it on ⁠Anchor⁠, ⁠Spotify⁠ and ⁠Apple Podcasts⁠.

To learn more about my work, visit my blog at ⁠https://melissajnelson.com⁠. You can connect with me on ⁠LinkedIn⁠ and ⁠Twitter⁠ or contact me at ⁠melissa.j.nelson@outlook.com. ⁠

Dec 03, 202212:59
09 | Aaron T. Francis, Vintage Black Canada
Nov 15, 202219:41
08 | Alexandra Mills, Concordia University Library
Nov 02, 202222:49
07 | Stanley H. Griffin, University of the West Indies, Mona Campus
Sep 10, 202225:01
06 | Dr. Charmaine A. Nelson, NSCAD University
Jul 28, 202222:58
05 | Natasha Henry-Dixon, Ontario Black History Society
Jul 14, 202218:41
04 | Dr. Mary Louise McCarthy-Brandt, REACH NB
Jun 13, 202228:27
03 | Rebecca Hankins, Texas A&M University Libraries
May 07, 202229:35
02 | Sean Smith, Archives of Ontario
Mar 18, 202221:11
01 | Welcome to the Gate

01 | Welcome to the Gate

Summary:

In this episode, I welcome listeners to Archives & Things and explain the concept behind the creation of this podcast.

Episode Resources:

The podcast logo features the photograph, "Street View from Family Home," which was captured in October 1974. This has been made accessible courtesy of Catherine Nelson, owner of The Mattis Family Fonds. A selection of digitized access copies of the records can be viewed here.

Land Acknowledgement:

As you listen in, this podcast was recorded on the traditional territories of many Indigenous nations including the Mississaugas of the Credit, the Anishnabeg, the Chippewa, the Haudenosaunee and the Wendat peoples. The land I am on is covered by the Toronto Purchase Treaty 13, which was signed with the Mississaugas of the Credit. This place is now home to many diverse Indigenous peoples from across Turtle Island. As a Black woman, I know that Black and Indigenous struggles and oppressions are deeply linked. The displacement and enslavement that came from settler colonialism were integrative processes. I also acknowledge that settler colonialism is a current and ongoing process in this land. As I stand in solidarity with Indigenous peoples, I am also grateful for the opportunity to live, create, and work on this land.

Stay Connected:

If you enjoyed listening to this podcast you can follow, rate, and share it on Anchor, Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

To learn more about my work, visit my blog at https://melissajnelson.com. You can connect with me on LinkedIn and Twitter or contact me at melissa.j.nelson@outlook.com. 

Jan 27, 202205:14