31 research outputs found
Records and their imaginaries: imagining the impossible, making possible the imagined
© 2015 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht This paper argues that the roles of individual and collective imaginings about the absent or unattainable archive and its contents should be explicitly acknowledged in both archival theory and practice. We propose two new terms: impossible archival imaginaries and imagined records. These concepts offer important affective counterbalances and sometimes resistance to dominant legal, bureaucratic, historical and forensic notions of evidence that so often fall short in explaining the capacity of records and archives to motivate, inspire, anger and traumatize. The paper begins with a reflection on how imagined records have surfaced in our own work related to human rights. It then reviews some of the ways in which the concept of the imaginary has been understood by scholarship in other fields. It considers how such interpretations might contribute epistemologically to the phenomenon of impossible archival imaginaries; and it provides examples of what we argue are impossible archival imaginaries at work. The paper moves on to examine specific cases and “archival stories” involving imagined records and contemplate how they can function societally in ways similar to actual records because of the weight of their absence or because of their aspirational nature. Drawing upon threads that run through these cases, we propose definitions of both phenomena that not only augment the current descriptive, analytical and explicatory armaments of archival theory and practice but also open up the possibility of “returning” them (Ketelaar in Research in the archival multiverse. Monash University Press, Melbourne 2015a) as theoretical contributions to the fields from which the cases were drawn
Roopbaan
An LGBT platform in Banglades
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314P Real-world (RW) multi-country study of BRCA1/2 testing in adult patients (pts) with HER2−advanced breast cancer (ABC)
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PCN323 Health Status/Utilities in Adult Patients with Germline BRCA1/2 Mutated (GBRCA1/2MUT) HER2− Advanced Breast Cancer (ABC) Treated with POLY(ADP-RIBOSE) Polymerase Inhibitors (PARPI) Versus Chemotherapy in a Real World (RW) Setting
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158P Patient (pt) demographics, treatment patterns (tx) and hematologic (heme) toxicities among pts with HER2− advanced breast cancer (ABC) and BRCA1/2 mutation(s) (BRCA1/2mut): A multi-country real-world (RW) study
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157P Germline BRCA1/2 (gBRCA1/2) testing patterns among oncologists (ONC) treating HER2- advanced breast cancer (ABC): Results from a multi-country real-world study
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312P Real-world (RW) multi-country study of BRCA1/2 mutation (BRCA1/2mut) testing trends among adult patients (pts) with HER2− advanced breast cancer (ABC)
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313P Real-world multi-country study of treatment trends among patients (pts) with HER2− BRCA1/2 mutated (BRCA1/2mut) advanced breast cancer (ABC)
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Queering archives: A roundtable discussion
“Queering Archives: A Roundtable Discussion” provides a reflection on histories of queer archives studies, while marking out some key directions for the field's future development. As a broad conversation about the career of the queer archival, as both intellectual project and political practice, this discussion focuses on developments and limits within North American queer studies of the archive, which emerges as a central object of analysis and is itself somewhat archived within the terms of the discussion. The roundtable discussion provides a sustained critical engagement with the profile of the queer archive as a site for radical struggles over historical knowledge, offering a renewed sense of the queer archive as a pertinent site for scholarship and politics across an array of orientations and tendencies