dear nettimers,

A slightly edited version of the text below – "Captured Alive” – has just been 
published online by the Network Archives Design and Digital Culture, which is 
facilitated by Het Nieuwe Instituut in Rotterdam. 

The online version can be found at:
https://nadd.hetnieuweinstituut.nl/en/articles/captured-alive-living-memory-and-digital-archives
 
<https://nadd.hetnieuweinstituut.nl/en/articles/captured-alive-living-memory-and-digital-archives>

Hopefully this is of interest to (some of) you.

- Eric

———————————————— 

Captured Alive
On living memory and digital archives

The archive and living memory

One of the problems of the archive that has fascinated me for a long time 
concerns its temporality. Inevitably the archive lifts the objects it contains 
out of their own time and out of their own context. Taxonomies, classification 
systems, and meta data descriptors (Dublin core) abstract the archived object 
from its original context in which it appeared. If the present, the moment of 
its appearance, is characterised by immediacy, then the archive contrarily is 
characterised by a suspension of time, a form of a-temporality that makes it 
possible to transmit something, some quality of this object across time.

This process of abstraction and suspension of time is inevitable because we 
cannot document or ‘archive’ the entire context in which the archived object (a 
document, text, image, data, audio, video, interactive work, website, app, 
whatever object) appeared. Trying to do so would lead to something reminiscent 
of the ‘mad cartographers’ project in the famous tale by Jorge Luis Borges, 
where the cartographers set out to create a one to one map of the entire 
empire. Covered by the veil of map the original territory slowly starts to rot 
away underneath the map until it breaks down. No longer supported by the empire 
it was supposed to identify also the map itself awaits its inevitable decay. In 
the end only a barren landscape is left where the decomposing remnants of the 
empire break through the cracks and holes in the rotting map.

By analogy the ‘mad archivist’ project is equally nonsensical. Every archivist 
is painfully aware how much of the original context is lost when documenting 
and archiving any particular object, and that the archive will never be able to 
restore that loss completely.

As a result the memory function of the archive is quite substantially different 
from that of living memory as tied to specific human biological and cultural 
functions. Living memory is always entirely situated in a particular cultural 
context, in a set of material / symbolical conditions, but also situated in the 
biological body of the one who holds this memory.  Furthermore, living memory 
is unstable. Also the person who remembers can never be entirely sure of their 
own memories. Memories evolve, mutate, blur, are continuously re-contextualised 
by new experiences. Sometimes memories are forgotten, or are apparently 
forgotten, only to re-emerge at the most unexpected moment. In certain cases, 
when trauma is involved, memories are obscured, blocked, inaccessible, and 
sometimes even inexpressible. Testimony expresses itself not only in what is 
said, what is written down or recorded, but also in what is not expressed.

This instability and situatedness of living memory makes it very hard to 
capture. If living memory is so deeply situated then what should be archived 
beside the distinct statement, the articulate and classifiable object itself? 
And how? Should the object be captured once and situated in the immediacy of 
that moment of capture? Or should we rather aim to capture living memory over 
and over again to acknowledge its propensity for continuous transformation? Or 
should we rather adopt a more pragmatic approach and create the conditions that 
make a continuous reinterpretation of the documented and archived objects 
possible?

Living memory and digital archives

The task of finding sufficiently sensitive and supple methods for integrating 
living memory in the archive seems daunting. Through their open ended 
character, the possibilities to link newer and older objects, and by creating 
options for user-feedback, networked digital archives can offer relevant 
capabilities to approach living memory in a respectful manner. Also when the 
issues at stake, the memories ‘captured’, are delicate, painful, or potentially 
problematic and controversial. This raises both technical challenges as well as 
ethical dilemmas.

Based on earlier experiences and practical work done in this area a number of 
relevant qualities and capabilities of digital archives can be identified that 
can help us engage the question of how to ‘capture’ living memory. The 
approaches I discuss here remain for now not entirely satisfying beginnings. 
They can best be understood as models that point out a certain potential. 

From living memory to the living archive

In a practice oriented research and design trajectory carried out at De Balie, 
centre for culture and politics in Amsterdam from 2004 to 2007, named The 
Living Archive [1], our team explored the technical, conceptual, and political 
challenges of capturing living cultural processes. The Living Archive project 
aimed to create a model in which documentation of living cultural processes, 
archived materials, ephemera, and discursive practices are interwoven as 
seamlessly as possible.

At the time we started out using the densely programmed theatre spaces of De 
Balie in Amsterdam as our ‘research-object’. A space filled with political 
discussions, cultural programs, performances, meetings of various social 
groupings, solidarity events, heated debates and controversies, festivals, 
testimonies of war, exodus, and political strive, then again collective 
reflection on dramatic events in The Netherlands and Amsterdam itself - in 
short, life. And this at a pounding rate of some 400 to 500 events in 10 months 
of active programming per year (averaging to about 1,5 event per day). How to 
document and capture this?

Instead of referring to this as archiving we rather used the more modest term 
of ‘documentation’. But that obviously did not solve our problems. We felt also 
that simply documenting and creating an immutable repository of traces of these 
events (archived webcasts) was not an adequate solution. We rather viewed 
documentation / archiving as a dynamic and open ended process that acts upon 
present and future events, and is simultaneously acted upon and rewritten by 
these events and their outcomes. We also felt that living archives should 
actively engage the construction of mythological cultural narratives to 
emphasise the open ended character of historical development and the 
possibilities for active involvement of a variety of actors in their 
determination. Even more so in the context of controversial political and 
cultural debates.

On the basis of this we identified three guiding principles:

First, approaching archiving (documentation) as a dynamic and open ended 
process. Which implied for us that a living archive is not simply a repository 
of memory objects. It involves the construction of a set of documentation tools 
for capturing current and future events as they unfold.

Secondly, we regarded archiving as a discursive principle. Thus the living 
archive required a set of tools that support and enable the continuous 
reinterpretation of archived materials, including rich media sources such as 
audio and video recordings.

And thirdly, we regarded open, distributed, shared and collaborative editorial 
policies as a necessary and constitutive element of The Living Archive. 
Traceability of the editorial history then is an indispensable instrument to 
support such open processes of ‘discursive formation’.

Exploring these guiding principles we believed that The Living Archive as such 
did (and does) not exist yet, but that its elements and necessary conditions 
can be specified.

Tactical Media Files as a living archive

The Tactical Media Files [2], an online documentation resource and ‘living 
archive’ for tactical media practices past, present, and future emerged from 
The Living Archive research trajectory at De Balie and was built there. The 
resource was originally created around the physical archives of the Next 5 
Minutes festivals and conferences on Tactical Media (1993-2003), located at the 
International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam.

Tactical Media operate at the intersection of art, politics, and media / 
technology. Tactical Media sought to give voice to the voiceless in a period 
when the media landscape slowly started to open up and a variety of groups and 
individuals seized upon the new possibilities offered by electronic / digital 
media, and then online media. Tactical Media always emerged from within the 
issues at stake and the people affected by them, and were primarily driven by 
their urgency, which might involve life and death questions. Inspiration came 
among others from early stages of HIV / Aids activism, and the famous maxim in 
response to the public denial for the pandemic, “Silence = Death”. The question 
was primarily what the role of the new (digital) media might be in opening up 
the public sphere.

Collections

Tactical Media Files was launched in November 2008 at a time when more and more 
materials about Tactical Media,  a more or less global phenomenon in the 1990s, 
started to disappear from the online (and offline) space. In many ways the 
tactical media practitioners had prefigured a cultural and political dynamic 
that was increasingly moving mainstream, however without any historical 
awareness of those practices themselves. To the point that, as theorist Felix 
Stalder put it, ‘everyone was doing tactical media without thinking of Tactical 
Media’ [3]. It seemed important to us, as convenors of the Next 5 Minutes 
event-series, which had given Tactical Media its name, to retrace and make 
accessible materials about this phenomenon (in lieu of calling it a 
‘movement’), and offer those as one significant reference point (of course 
among many others) for contemporary dynamics.

One of the ways in which we have tried to make it possible to reinterpret and 
re-contextualise the materials that are collected in the resource was by 
creating so-called ‘collections’. This offers some basic tools to any editor 
invited to work with us to select materials from the ‘archive’ around a 
particular theme and provide comment and context in an introductory essay that 
frames the particular ‘collection’. 

This idea of invited and collective editorship has proven to be more difficult 
than imagined, hoped for. To this day the invitation remains open for external 
‘editors’, basically anybody who cares enough, to work with our team to create 
new thematic collections, which require no prior technical knowledge or skills. 
However, to this date only the first collection exists, “The Concept of 
Tactical Media”, which offers a selection of different takes on the concept in 
the framing essay. Beyond this first attempt we see, also in other online 
resources that the only successful model created so far for shared and open 
editorial policies has been Wikipedia, which itself is certainly not free of 
justified criticism.

Robert M Ochshorn - Tactical Recollections

A different approach was explored for an exhibition series in 2017 where 
designer, artist, programmer Robert Ochshorn created a mesmerising moving 
interface for the TMF video collection that the viewer can visually scroll 
through. [4] Every now and then there is a rectangle floating above the mosaic 
that if clicked starts a personal comment by a Tactical Media protagonist. By 
clicking on any video still the video that it belongs to starts playing and at 
the point where the still is taken. The video continues to  play as long as the 
viewer keeps it selected with a mouse or trackpad. On release the video 
dissolves in the mosaic again. Ochshorn devised this as a deliberate game of 
(mild) frustration.

The aim is to direct attention away from individual videos and towards the 
commentaries that tactical media practitioners provided. Commentaries cross 
each other at various points in the collection  / the mosaic, where it is 
possible to jump from one voice and commentary to another. Eventually, over 
time as enough commentaries are collected, a dense network of narrations of the 
underlying video materials is achieved that privileges no single reading, but 
does consist of first hand experiences (living memories) of the protagonists 
involved in the materials collected.

While this model is more satisfying than the ‘collections’ layer around the 
documentation resource, the main problem has been to collect sufficient 
commentaries from tactical media practitioners. In part this is a funding 
question, which results from the policy that the Tactical Media Files relies 
exclusively on project-related short-term funding and follows a minimum cost 
strategy to remain independent of influence by any strategic actors, including 
public and private funding agencies. More than twelve years into its existence 
this has proven a highly effective strategy.

ACTUP  Oral History Project

The relationship between Tactical Media and HIV / AIDS activism has always been 
strenuous. When Caroline Nevejan convened the Seropositive Ball [5] at Paradiso 
in 1990, high profile members of the New York AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power 
(ACTUP) such as the influential artist Gregg Bordowitz, critiqued the presence 
of early internet connections to connect with members to sick to travel. 
Bordowitz condemned the use of computer technology in this context as 
alienating. yet Tactical Media seemed to offer a viable approach how to address 
ACTUP’s famous dictum ‘Silence=Death’.

The online and offline ACT UP Oral History Project [6] is a collection of 
interviews with surviving members of the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power, New 
York. Established in 2001 by Sarah Schulman and Jim Hubbard, Schulman in her 
very recent book “Let the Record Show” reflects on the genesis of the project: 
“Since the popular availability of protease inhibitors five years before, the 
AIDS activist movement had virtually disappeared from public view.  (..) The 
emergence of internet culture left ACT UP behind, as most of its materials were 
not digitized or searchable.” The ACT UP grass roots community of activists was 
scattered, undocumented and seemingly forgotten. Meanwhile concerns over the 
misrepresentation of those communities stressed the importance in Schulman’s 
words to ‘make the history and experience of AIDS activism visible and 
accessible’.

Over a period of 17 years Schulman and Hubbard conducted interviews with 188 
surviving members of ACT UP New York. The transcripts of those interviews form 
the core of her book. Next to that the San Francisco Main Library and the New 
York Public Library hold videos of the first fifty interviews, while complete 
transcripts of all interviews can be downloaded from the project website. Five 
minute video excerpts of the interviews are also available at the website.

Schulman’s book offers a new layer of interpretation over the extremely 
controversial and sensitive histories (herstories) of AIDS activism and the HIV 
pandemic. Most importantly the video interviews and their full transcripts 
offer us a first hand access to personal testimonies and living memories of 
those directly affected by the pandemic and the various ways in which affected 
communities and individuals were silenced out in the wider public culture. It 
is hard to overestimate this contribution to social her/history.

Engaging living memory in (digital) archives

The models referred here, De Balie and its dense debating and live streaming 
environment, the Tactical Media Files resource and the contextual layers 
created around it, as well as the experiences of tactical media practitioners 
worldwide, the open and collaborative editorial policies of Wikipedia, and the 
ACTUP Oral History project all hint towards the potential of digital archives 
in various forms to capture living memory in a sensitive and respectful manner.

They also highlight the importance of proceeding with caution and modesty 
towards their subject matter. Particularly the delicateness and urgency of 
activist practices bring out these qualities most pertinently, but the 
experiences gained in doing so apply across the whole cultural and 
socio-political spectrum. The dynamic and open ended character of digital and 
online media offers important capabilities for engaging with living memory of 
both individuals and communities. First of all by creating spaces for 
interpretation and re-interpretation, within which the personal voice and the 
first person account can be given centre stage.

With this, however, the politics of the archive, most prominently of course the 
question of inclusion and exclusion, do not disappear. This is why the open 
ended character of digital archives and the continuous openness for 
reinterpretation is so important. Not just to amend the unavoidable distortion 
of these voices, but to connect these resources to living cultural and 
political practices and make them available to practitioners (makers, 
designers, artists, activists, researchers, students) to inform their own 
contemporary practices.

Public access, availability, and participation are a prerequisite for these 
digital  / living archives to function. This extends far beyond the 
technological issues raised here and includes the question of how to create 
sufficient engagement with a resource to be able to truly call it a ‘living 
archive’. Hybrid strategies, combining online media and offline repositories, 
digital and analogue media (print!) provide the best guarantees for their 
longer term sustainability. In this sense living archives do not stand in 
contradiction to ‘conventional’ archiving practices. They can much rather act 
as complementary forces, combining dynamism and longer term preservation.

Eric Kluitenberg,
September 2021.

References:

1 - The web dossier created around the project at the Balie website is no 
longer available. The final report of the trajectory is available here (only in 
Dutch): https://coolmin.stackstorage.com/s/KOjyCqMsQ5Wm9cJh 
2 - http://www.tacticalmediafiles.net/ 
3 - Stalder, Felix (2008): 30 Years of Tactical Media, in: Public Netbase: Non 
Stop Future. New  Practices in Art and Media, World Information Institute / 
KUDA.org, Vienna / Novi Sad, 190-195.
4 -  http://www.tacticalmediafiles.net/chew
5 - 
https://www.paradiso.nl/en/program/the-seropositive-ball-how-aids-changes-our-lives-een-69-uur-durende-gebeurtenis-voor-mensen-met-en-zonder-hiv/33177/
 
6 - http://www.actuporalhistory.org

––––––––

Eric Kluitenberg is an independent cultural and media theorist, writer, curator 
and educator. He teaches currently at the ArtScience Interfaculty and the 
Interactive Media Design program of the Royal Academy of the Arts, University 
of the Arts The Hague. He is also the editor in chief of the Tactical Media 
Files online documentation resource.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/eric-kluitenberg-6166782b/ 

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