Archive Fever: Theory & Method
The course deals with how archivists, architects, and historians have faced the myriad archive fevers and archival turns of the 20th and 21st centuries. This period has seen a marked shift between archives being used as 'source' to becoming a 'subject' of critical inquiry. However, these questions are not limited to the past few centuries. Rather, the philosophical questions of history and its relationship with the archive span millennia from Assyrian clay tablets and Shang dynasty oracle bones to the post-revolutionary foundation of the French national archives. This seminar examines how "the architect and the archive are inseparable" and how the archivist and the historian are entangled to attend to the contested memories and denied histories embodied within buildings, cultural institutions, and architectures (Wigley, 1995).
Through visits and hands-on research in archives in Boston and New York City, students will develop a critical methodology that can be applied to their own research and practice. Students will learn to interpret and triangulate primary sources, such as texts, films, maps, drawings, manuscripts, correspondence, government documents, newspapers, photographs, and architectural models.