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1981
Volume 36, Issue 71
  • ISSN: 0845-4450
  • E-ISSN: 2048-6928

Abstract

The misinformation campaign that claims transgender people “don’t exist” correlates to the erasure and neglect of trans history and heritage in national, institutional, and community archives worldwide. What kinds of archival and artistic sources provide evidence of the plenitude of trans lives? Artistic experiments with historical documents and records but also gossip and ephemera signals a productive and transformative form of engagement that highlights the malleability and multiplicity of the archival evidentiary paradigm. How do artists interpret and take up such bequeathed heritage? Analyzing the replay and recreation of audio-visual records in (Rhys Ernst, 2014) and (Holly Revell & Travis Alabanza, 2019) I look to how these “artchival objects” concentrate and facilitate intergeneration transmission and (dis)identification. I argue that archival bequeathment is not unidirectional – a donor to the archive – but also involves the artist’s acknowledgement of the gift.

This article is Open Access under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-ND), which allows users to copy, distribute and transmit the article as long as the author is attributed, the article is not used for commercial purposes, and the work is not modified or adapted in any way. To view a copy of the licence, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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/content/journals/10.1386/public_00232_1
2025-10-04
2026-03-17
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