VIRTUAL BELONGING

“Virtual Belonging: Assessing the Affective Impact of Digital Records Creation in Community Archives” is a three-year participatory action research project led by TAVP and the South Asian American Digital Archive SAADA in collaboration with UCLA.

Through funding from the Institute for Museum and Library Services (IMLS), the projects sponsors archival fellows at TAVP and SAADA as they collect oral history interviews from their community, with TAVP and SAADA staff providing training and support along the way. Throughout the process, UCLA researchers are also working with the fellows and their interviewees to develop research and tools that center the experiences and needs of contributors to community-based archives like TAVP and SAADA.

The goal of this work is to improve services for community members—particularly those from underrepresented communities—who create records for community-based archives. The project will also have a significant impact for libraries, museums, and archives interested in practicing an ethics of care that center the needs, agency, and dignity of donors, users, and record creators in order to mitigate potential harms or risks to the communities we serve, especially in the context of violence, trauma, and grief.

Researchers for this project found that participants had a very positive experience being interviewed. In UCLA’s article, “It Was as Much for Me As for Anybody Else”: The Creation of Self-Validating Records, researchers reflect on the methodologies, archival theories, and emotional impacts of community archiving. When asking a community what feels like to create a record, folks often reflected on the positive impact it had on themselves as storytellers rather those who might engage with the record itself. Researchers found that those who interviewed with TAVP felt that, “record creation cleanses trauma and enables formerly incarcerated people to wrest control of their own narratives.”