'Most people think of archives, especially big government archives, as either neutral sites of memory and history, or as mundane, boring storage facilities for administrative records, or they don’t think about them at all. But the poet Dr Natalie Harkin (Narungga) knows what many First Nations people know, that official archives are a powerful colonial weapon as well as a site of mourning. They are time capsules and they are also bullets. Created by state-sanctioned surveillance and violence, these archives have the power to sustain and reproduce that same violence. As Harkin says, there is ‘blood on the records’.' (Introduction)
Epigraph:
There is no political power without control of the archive, if not memory
— Jacques Derrida, Archive Fever
archive fever paradox
my blood it pumps
where hearts
have
stopped
— Natalie Harkin, Archival-Poetics