Academic literature on the topic 'Archives Victoria'

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Journal articles on the topic "Archives Victoria"

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Mattison, Laci, and Rachel Tait-Ripperdan. "Digital Archives and the Literature Classroom." Pedagogy 22, no. 2 (April 1, 2022): 295–307. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15314200-9576485.

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Abstract This article describes the implementation of and assessment findings for a digital archival assignment in the 3000-level Victorian Literature and Culture course at Florida Gulf Coast University. The assignment utilized ProQuest's database, Queen Victoria's Journals, which comprises the extant journals of Queen Victoria, and demonstrated the value of primary historical research and digital archives in enhancing student content knowledge, information literacy, and critical thinking.
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Wateren, J. F. van der. "Archival resources in the Victoria and Albert Museum." Art Libraries Journal 14, no. 2 (1989): 16–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0307472200006192.

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The Victoria and Albert Museum, itself an archive of material culture, houses several collections of archival records. The Museum’s Registered Papers are divided between the Museum itself, which holds those papers relating to objects in the Museum, and the Public Record Office, where papers relating to Museum buildings and administration can be found; all papers produced since 1984 are to be housed together in a newly established V & A Archive. The quality of the archive of Registered Papers is uneven due to the lack of a controlling and unifying policy; this, and questions of conservation and administration, are being addressed as part of the current restructuring of the Museum. For the same reason the archives of the different Departments, though important, vary considerably not only in content but also in their organisation. The National Art Library, part of the V & A, includes archival collections of ephemera, comprising examples of printing and graphic design, and of manuscripts, including artists’ papers; it also includes the Archive of Art and Design, founded in 1978 to avoid the splitting up of significant archives between the Museum’s Departments.
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Pardy, John, and Lesley F. Preston. "The great unraveling; restructuring and reorganising education and schooling in Victoria, 1980-1992." History of Education Review 44, no. 1 (June 1, 2015): 99–114. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/her-03-2014-0025.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to trace the restructure of the Victorian Education Department in Australia during the years 1980-1992. It examines how the restructuring of the department resulted in a generational reorganization of secondary schooling. This reorganization culminated in the closure of secondary technical schools that today continues to have enduring effects on access and equity to different types of secondary schooling. Design/methodology/approach – The history is based on documentary and archival research and draws on publications from the State government of Victoria, Education Department/Ministry of Education Annual Reports and Ministerial Statements and Reviews, Teacher Union Archives, Parliamentary Debates and unpublished theses and published works. Findings – As an outcome the restructuring of the Victorian Education Department, schools and the reorganization of secondary schooling, a dual system of secondary schools was abolished. The introduction of a secondary colleges occurred through a process of rationalization of schools and what secondary schooling would entail. Originality/value – This study traces how, over a decade, eight ministers of education set about to reform education by dismantling and undoing the historical development of Victoria’s distinctive secondary schools system.
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Standfield, Rachel. "Archives of Protection." Pacific Historical Review 87, no. 1 (2018): 54–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/phr.2018.87.1.54.

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Aboriginal Protectorates operated in the late 1830s and 1840s in the Port Phillip District of New South Wales (later to become the colony of Victoria) in Australia and New Zealand. This article examines a small selection of the extensive archive of Port Phillip and New Zealand Protectorates to illustrate the ways that language and communication work within colonial projects to support and extend colonial authority. Examining language acquisition by Protectors, it places attitudes to and use of Indigenous languages within the context of colonialism in each site, arguing that Indigenous voices in New Zealand were co-opted, and in Port Phillip were marginalised, in the service of divergent approaches to dispossessing Indigenous peoples from their land. The article also explores glimpses of Māori or Aboriginal experiences of humanitarianism, colonisation, and dispossession captured in this archive.
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Pritchard, Jane. "Archives of the Dance (24): The Alhambra Moul Collection at the Victoria and Albert Museum." Dance Research 32, no. 2 (November 2014): 233–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/drs.2014.0108.

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This article in the ‘Archives of the Dance’ series looks at one specific collection held in the Theatre & Performance Collections of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. At first glance, the Alfred Moul Collection (THM/75) appears a small collection filling only half a dozen archive boxes plus some photographs and press cuttings books. Nevertheless its content is very revealing about the management of the Alhambra Palace of Variety, Leicester Square, during the years 1901–1914, and the ballets created there. It is not exclusively a dance archive but places the work of the theatre's ballet company in the context of variety theatre and the full range of turns presented there. The collection focuses on the final decade of the fifty years from 1864 in which the Alhambra dominated the ballet-scene in London. This final period was a time of decline and competition for the ballet company. The collection reveals the management's awareness of competition and the consequent need to embrace a wide range of genres; the word ballet was used to cover all forms of theatre dance and, as the collection reveals, the wide search for new dance stars for productions; it enhances our knowledge of dance and dancers from France, Russia, America and Denmark as well as our knowledge of dance in Britain immediately before the full impact of the Russian ballet was felt.
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Sepahvand, Ashkan, Meg Slater, Annette F. Timm, Jeanne Vaccaro, Heike Bauer, and Katie Sutton. "Curating Visual Archives of Sex." Radical History Review 2022, no. 142 (January 1, 2022): 19–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/01636545-9397016.

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Abstract In this roundtable, four curators of exhibitions showcasing sexual archives and histories—with a particular focus on queer and trans experiences—were asked to reflect on their experiences working as scholars and artists across a range of museum and gallery formats. The exhibitions referred to below were Bring Your Own Body: Transgender between Archives and Aesthetics, curated by Jeanne Vaccaro (discussant) with Stamatina Gregory at The Cooper Union, New York, in 2015 and Haverford College, Pennsylvania, in 2016; Odarodle: An imaginary their_story of naturepeoples, 1535–2017, curated by Ashkan Sepahvand (discussant) at the Schwules Museum (Gay Museum) in Berlin, Germany, in 2017; Queer, curated by Ted Gott, Angela Hesson, Myles Russell-Cook, Meg Slater (discussant), and Pip Wallis at the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia, in 2022; and TransTrans: Transatlantic Transgender Histories, curated by Alex Bakker, Rainer Herrn, Michael Thomas Taylor, and Annette F. Timm (discussant) at the Schwules Museum in Berlin, Germany, in 2019–20, adapting an earlier exhibition shown at the University of Calgary, Canada, in 2016.
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López López, Ligia (Licho), Christopher T. McCaw, Rhonda Di Biase, Amy McKernan, Sophie Rudolph, Aristidis Galatis, Nicky Dulfer, et al. "The quarantine archives: educators in “social isolation”." History of Education Review 49, no. 2 (September 19, 2020): 195–213. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/her-05-2020-0028.

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PurposeThe archives gathered in this collection engage in the current COVID-19 moment. They do so in order to attempt to understand it, to think and feel with others and to create a collectivity that, beyond the slogan “we are in this together”, seriously contemplates the implications of what it means to be given an opportunity to alter the course of history, to begin to learn to live and educate otherwise.Design/methodology/approachThis paper is collectively written by twelve academics in March 2020, a few weeks into the first closing down of common spaces in 2020, Victoria, Australia. Writing through and against “social isolation”, the twelve quarantine archives in this paper are all at once questions, methods, data, analysis, implications and limitations of these pandemic times and their afterlives.FindingsThese quarantine archives reveal a profound sense of dislocation, relatability and concern. Several of the findings in this piece succeed at failing to explain in generalising terms these un-new upending times and, in the process, raise more questions and propose un-named methodologies.Originality/valueIf there is anything this paper could claim as original, it would be its present ability to respond to the current times as a historical moment of intensity. At times when “isolation”, “self” and “contained” are the common terms of reference, the “collective”, “connected” and “socially engaged” nature of this paper defies those very terms. Finally, the socially transformative desire archived in each of the pieces is a form of future history-making that resists the straight order with which history is often written and made.
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Alberdi Lonbide, Xabier, and Iosu Etxezarraga Ortuondo. "The Victoria: An example of Basque maritime technology that enabled the first circumnavigation of the globe, 1518-1522." International Journal of Maritime History 33, no. 2 (May 2021): 241–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/08438714211013575.

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Using unpublished documentation collected from Spanish archives located in Seville, this article establishes the Basque origin of the Victoria, protagonist of the first circumnavigation of the globe. The article also assesses the suitability for transoceanic voyages of a Basque vessel of the early sixteenth century through a comparative analysis of the five ships that participated in the expedition.
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Devor. "Preserving the Footprints of Transgender Activism: The Transgender Archives at the University of Victoria." QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking 1, no. 2 (2014): 200. http://dx.doi.org/10.14321/qed.1.2.0200.

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Bail, Jeannie, and Ailsa Craig. "The Alert Collector: Transgender Culture and Resources." Reference & User Services Quarterly 56, no. 4 (June 21, 2017): 249. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/rusq.56.4.249.

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In recent years, there has been an increasing awareness of transgender culture, issues, and experiences. In popular culture, trans celebrities such as Laverne Cox, Chaz Bono, and Janet Mock have been a part of this shift, often acting as celebrity spokespeople to increase understanding of trans issues. Even with the greater visibility of trans lives in popular culture, ongoing court battles like G.G. v. Gloucester County School Board (a US case centered on trans students’ rights to use communal bathrooms congruent with their gender) demonstrate the need for greater understanding and acceptance.As co-authors, we have had the privilege of working with materials on loan from the Transgender Archives at the University of Victoria (Canada), the largest transgender archive in the world. This experience, which included collecting comments from library patrons who viewed the collection materials, highlighted for us the role that libraries and archives play in laying the groundwork for increased diversity, awareness, and inclusion related to trans lives, culture, and community. It is not only a matter of meeting the information needs of those who are coming out as transgender, but the wider community of family (spouses, children, parents, etc.), friends, and allies. And, alongside the value of providing information with direct practical application, patrons’ comments underscored how the inclusion of trans resources at the library enriches our cultural imaginary, and creates the space for imagining and living what they have sometimes felt to be “impossible lives.”
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Archives Victoria"

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Gibbs, Desmond Robert. "Victorian school books : a study of the changing social content and use of school books in Victoria, 1848-1948, with particular reference to school readers /." Connect to thesis, 1987. http://eprints.unimelb.edu.au/archive/00001321.

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Muller, Damon Anthony. "The Social context of femicide in Victoria /." Connect to thesis, 2005. http://eprints.unimelb.edu.au/archive/00001668.

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Pellegry, Florence. "Cultures sexuelles et rapports sociaux de sexe à la fin de l'ère victorienne : le cas des classes laborieuses à partir des archives du London Foundling Hospital." Paris 7, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013PA070062.

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Dans ce travail, nous nous intéressons aux moeurs sexuelles des classes laborieuses à la fin de l'ère victorienne (1875-1901). Notre recherche s'appuie principalement sur des courriers intimes et des témoignages retrouvés dans les dossiers d'adoption des archives du London Foundling Hospital, institut charitable qui accueille les enfants illégitimes depuis la fin du dix-huitième siècle. Grâce à ces sources primaires, nous nous proposons de ressusciter le passé, de retrouver des instants clés de la vie de jeunes couples d'amoureux de Londres et de sa région, pour la plupart des travailleurs peu ou moyennement qualifiés qui se rencontrent dans le tumulte de la plus grande ville jamais vue au monde. Nous chercherons donc à faire un tableau plus fidèle des relations amoureuses et sexuelles de ces jeunes couples britanniques. Ce travail s'articule autour de trois axes. Dans un premier temps, nous dresserons le portrait des populations à l'étude, pour ensuite évaluer la fiabilité des sources et se rappeler le contexte historique et idéologique du dernier quart du dix-neuvième siècle. Nous nous intéresserons ensuite à l'interprétation des correspondances intimes et à ce que le discours masculin dévoile des moeurs amoureuses des couples. Nous considèrerons les codes de morale qui régissent les relations amoureuses et nous conclurons enfin cette étude par une approche plus théorique des sources grâce à laquelle on s'intéressera au rapport entre les sexes et aux idéaux amoureux des couples
This work examines the sexual mores of the working classes at the end of the Victorian era (1875-1901). The research is based on the study of private correspondences and testimonies found in the archives of the London Foundling Hospital, a charitable institute welcoming illegitimate children since the end of the eighteenth century. Thanks to these primary sources, we will bring to life certain elements of the past and rediscover key moments in the lives of young couples in London and its suburbs most of whom were working or lower middle class skilled workers who met in the busy streets of London. We will endeavour to paint a faithful portrait of the loving and sexual relations of these young British couples. This study is structured around three principal parts: firstly, we will construct a portrait of the population under study, evaluate the reliability of the sources available and focus on the historical and ideological context of the last quarter of the nineteenth century. Secondly, we will interpret the private correspondences and examine what the male discourse tells us about the sexual mores of the couples under study. We will also look into the moral codes regulating love affairs during the period. We will bring this study to a close with a more theoretical approach to the sources enabling us to draw certain conclusions concerning the relationship between the sexes and the romantic ideal of the couples
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Jordan, Kerry Lea. "Houses and status : the grand houses of nineteenth century Victoria /." Connect to thesis, 2003. http://eprints.unimelb.edu.au/archive/00000837.

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Arnot, Alison. "Legalisation of the sex industry in the state of Victoria, Australia /." Connect to thesis, 2002. http://eprints.unimelb.edu.au/archive/00000307.

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Hunter, Cecily Elizabeth. "Doctoring old age : a social history of geriatric medicine in Victoria /." Connect to thesis, 2003. http://eprints.unimelb.edu.au/archive/00000123.

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Murray, Kristen. "Sex work as work : labour regulation in the legal sex industry in Victoria /." Connect to thesis, 2001. http://eprints.unimelb.edu.au/archive/00000517.

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Smith, Lucy Christina. "Julia Margaret Cameron and archival creativity : traces of photographic imagination from the Victorian album to neo-Victorian fiction." Thesis, University of Portsmouth, 2017. https://researchportal.port.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/julia-margaret-cameron-and-archival-creativity(06ec2450-6138-45d0-a2ff-0c97632cd3ff).html.

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The photographs and albums of Julia Margaret Cameron (1815-1879) form an originating site of archival creativity, both in their internal dynamics and for a range of textual representations. Conceptually, the archive is increasingly being explored as a creative and affective site for the production of culture and fiction, with Victorian traces featuring prominently due to their richness and profusion. Creative experiments with textual archives have met with critical attention; yet the visual archive is also embedded with fluid patterns of meaning, complicated by the flexible relation between image and text. Victorian photography in particular offers auratic and temporal qualities that can produce implicit narratives. Drawing on a recent wave of Cameron scholarship, I argue that Cameron was an archival artist, creating portraits inspired by history and literature that embed a matrix of cultural strands which demand to be interpreted affectively by the viewer. Her many photographic albums can be “read” as visual archives that present a series of imagined experiences to the viewer, question Victorian politics of identity, and contain fluid narrative potential. These archival narratives can be compared to the way in which Cameron’s photographic imagination has been translated over the last century and a half into textual narratives, in which the photographs act as material tokens of memory, conduits of female emancipation and transformative visual experiences. Her visual structures and arresting style significantly influenced her great-niece, Virginia Woolf, who was also an advocate of archival affectivity as a means to bring attention to “obscure lives”, and whose flexible approach to history adds layers to Cameron’s literary afterlife. In recent years, Cameron’s works have been evoked in neo-Victorian fiction as visual traces that open the text to new interpretations. Representations of Cameron’s photographs deconstruct the dynamics of nineteenth-century visual culture and bring “obscure lives” into the light, conduct structural and temporal experimentations in fiction through sequences of visual experiences, and present the overwhelming power of light as access to the intangible amidst a collage of fragmented materials and meanings. Cameron’s Victorian photographs and albums are radical archival art forms, and demonstrate the exponential archival creativity of the photographic trace to blur accepted borders between reality and fiction, and between the Victorian imagination and the multiple perspectives of the present.
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Roche, Vivienne Carol. "Razor gang to Dawkins : a history of Victoria College, an Australian College of Advanced Education." Connect to digital thesis, 2003. http://eprints.unimelb.edu.au/archive/00000468.

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Archer, Melanie Siân. "The Ecology of invertebrate associations with vertebrate carrion in Victoria, with reference to forensic entomology /." Connect to thesis, 2002. http://eprints.unimelb.edu.au/archive/00000566.

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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Melbourne, Dept. of Zoology, 2002.
Typescript (photocopy). Cover title : 'The Ecology of inerterate associations with vertebrate carrion in Victoria, with reference to forensic entomology' Includes bibliographical references (leaves 156-172).
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Books on the topic "Archives Victoria"

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Victoria Tower treasures from the Parliamentary Archives. London, United Kingdom: Houses of Parliament, Parliamentary Archives, 2010.

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Archives, University of Victoria (B C. ). Inventory of the papers of Robin Skelton in the University of Victoria Archives. [Victoria, B.C.]: University of Victoria, 1990.

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Carefoote, Pearce J. Academic curriculum analysis of the United Church of Canada/Victoria University Archives. Toronto: The Archives, 2001.

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United Church of Canada/Victoria University Archives. United Church of Canada/Victoria University Archives archival procedures manual. [Toronto: The Archives], 1995.

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MacLean, Anne M. Inventory of the papers of Robin Skelton in the University of Victoria Archives. [Victoria, B.C.]: University of Victoria, 1990.

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Russell, E. W. A matter of record: A history of Public Record Office Victoria. North Melbourne, Vic., Australia: Public Record Office Victoria, 2003.

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Waymouth, Robyn. A feasibility study for the establishment of an architectural archive in Victoria. Melbourne: The Library, 1989.

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University of Victoria (B.C.). Archives. A guide to non-administrative records, personal papers and Canadian manuscripts in the University of Victoria Archives/Special Collections. [Victoria, B.C.]: University of Victoria Archives/Special Collections, 1992.

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University of Victoria (B.C.). Archives. A guide to non-administrative records, personal papers and Canadian manuscripts in the University of Victoria Archives/Special Collections. [Victoria, B.C.]: University of Victoria Archives/Special Collections, 1992.

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Victoria. The papers of Queen Victoria on foreign affairs: Files from the Royal Archives, Windsor Castle. Bethesda, MD: University Publications of America, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Archives Victoria"

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Jones, Mike. "Museums Victoria and the history of museum computing." In Artefacts, Archives, and Documentation in the Relational Museum, 41–63. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003092704-2-3.

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Bowsfield, Hartwell. "A Note on the Papers of Victoria, Lady Welby in the York University Archives." In Foundations of Semiotics, 275. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/fos.23.19bow.

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Morrison, Kevin A. "Learning in Archives: Fevers, Romances, Methodologies." In Victorian Culture and Experiential Learning, 121–41. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-93791-1_8.

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Piaia, Gregorio. "Historicism and Eclecticism: The Age of Victor Cousin." In International Archives of the History of Ideas Archives internationales d'histoire des idées, 341–433. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-84490-5_5.

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Clark, Walter Aaron. "Primary Sources (Archivo de la Fundación Victoria y Joaquín Rodrigo, Madrid)." In Joaquín Rodrigo, 26–31. New York : Routledge, 2021. | Series: Routledge music bibliographies | Description: bibliographical references and index.: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429298455-2.

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"Selected Correspondence of Queen Victoria." In Archives of Empire, 478–85. Duke University Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9780822385042-098.

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"Queen Victoria, Letters to Mary Gordon (1890)." In Archives of Empire, 578–79. Duke University Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1220psq.64.

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Namulawa, Victoria Tibenda, Samuel Mutiga, Fred Musimbi, Sundy Akello, Fredrick Ngángá, Leah Kago, Martina Kyallo, Jagger Harvey, and Sita Ghimire. "Assessment of Fungal Contamination in Fish Feed from the Lake Victoria Basin, Uganda." In Prime Archives in Toxinology. Vide Leaf, Hyderabad, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.37247/patox.1.2021.2.

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"Victor Victoria." In Fashion Photography Archive. Bloomsbury, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781474260428-fpa053.

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Heim, Otto. "Recalling Oceanic Communities." In Oceanic Archives, Indigenous Epistemologies, and Transpacific American Studies, 239–60. Hong Kong University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5790/hongkong/9789888455775.003.0012.

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This chapter situates the dramatic work of Samoan and Hawaiian playwrights John Kneubuhl and Victoria Nalani Kneubuhl in relation to an Oceanian sense of community rooted in a customarily open, fluid, and mobile consciousness of space, in order to ask how such a community consciousness may challenge dominant political identifications and empower the imagination of transnational, postcolonial forms of belonging. Noting the fundamental importance of memory in sustaining a sense of community that thrives in mobility while maintaining the indivisibility of people and land, the chapter examines the memory work performed in John Kneubuhl’s Think of a Garden and Other Plays and Victoria Kneubuhl’s Hawai‘i Nei: Island Plays, as it stirs the limits of living memory, discloses the spectral life of the past in the present, and raises questions about the relationship between loss and remembrance. In different ways, I argue, these plays can be seen to enact a sense of community that seems radically opposed to communitarian thinking in a national frame but fitting to the transnational imagination of a sea of islands, reimagining genealogies in terms of finitude, difference, and interdependence.
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Conference papers on the topic "Archives Victoria"

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Raisbeck, Peter. "Reworlding the Archive: Robin Boyd, Gregory Burgess and Indigenous Knowledge in the Architectural Archive.” between Architecture and Engineering." In The 38th Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand. online: SAHANZ, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55939/a3985p56dc.

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In her book Decolonising Solidarity: Dilemmas and Directions for Supporters of Indigenous Struggles, Clare Land suggest how non-Indigenous people might develop new frameworks supporting Indigenous struggles. Land argues research is deeply implicated with processes of colonisation and the appropriation of indigenous knowledge. Given that architectural archives are central to the research of architectural history, how might these archives be decolonised? This paper employs two disparate archives to develop a framework of how architectural archivists might begin to decolonise these archives. Firstly, these archives are the Grounds Romberg and Boyd Archive (GRB) at the State Library of Victoria (SLV). Secondly, the Greg Burgess Archive is now located at Avington, Sidonia in Victoria. The materials from each of these archives will be discussed in relation to two frameworks. These are the Tandanya-Adelaide Declaration endorsed by The Australian Society of Archivists (ASA) and the Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property (ICIP) framework developed by Janke (2019). These archival frameworks suggest how interconnected architectural histories and historiographies might be read, reframed and restored. Decolonising architectural archives will require a continuous process of reflection and political engagement with collections and archives. In pursuing these actions, archivists and architectural historians can begin to participate in the indigenous Reworlding of the archive.
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Grant, Angus, and Peter Raisbeck. "A Selective Digital History: Limitations within Digitisation Practices and their Implications." In The 38th Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand. online: SAHANZ, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55939/a4013phyct.

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The Greg Burgess Archive (GBA) is perhaps the most complete, and arguably the most valuable architectural practice archive in Australia. However, its physical size presents a problem to both visibility, and longevity, and plans are in place to digitise the collection. While in storage at Avington, Victoria, an archival team – including Burgess himself – have begun repairing the 447 models, scanning the hundreds of tubes of drawings, and extracting data from countless obsolete media. Yet how reasonable is it to assume the efficacy of a program of digitisation? What are the implications for an objective architectural historiography if the process fails? Precipitated by difficulties in accurately digitising Burgess’ intricate physical models, this piece explores both questions. Firstly, the digitisation process for the GBA acts as a case study. Then, the technical limitations encountered are placed within a wider context of archival concerns in today’s diverse, digital age. These archival concerns are recognised in the eliding of ephemeral archival material – bodies, experiences, spoken histories – all of which may elude Western archival frameworks. What is illustrated here is that the same underrepresentation may extend into digitised collections, and that what is omitted is precisely the contents of the GBA – intricate, tectonic objects which do not conform to the idiosyncrasies of the technology at hand. The subsequent discussion then proceeds to advance, and explicate, the notion of the third object. Curation, then, is surrendered to the archival process itself, and the agency to reify our material history is at risk of being left to the machines, and their preference for certain types of ethnocultural artifact. Considering this, alternative strategies are presented for both the GBA and institutions at large, yet archivists and historians must be conscious of these limitations, or risk the failings of traditional, institutional archival systems spreading throughout a growing digital landscape.
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Nosil, J., G. Justice, P. Fisher, G. Ritchie, W. J. Weigl, and H. Gnoyke. "A Prototype Multi-Modality Picture Archive And Communication System At Victoria General Hospital." In Medical Imaging II, edited by Roger H. Schneider and Samuel J. Dwyer III. SPIE, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.968791.

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Sheffield, Kathryn, and Elizabeth Morse-McNabb. "Creating an historical land cover data set for the Wimmera region, Victoria, Australia from the USGS Landsat archive." In IGARSS 2013 - 2013 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium. IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/igarss.2013.6723367.

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Reports on the topic "Archives Victoria"

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Taber, Emily. Using Archival and Archaeofaunal Records to Examine Victorian-era Fish Use in the Pacific Northwest. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.6277.

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Dilabio, R. N. W., and R. D. Knight. Kimberlitic indicator minerals in the Geological Survey of Canada's archived till samples: results of analysis of samples from Victoria Island and the Hay River area, Northwest Territories. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/209177.

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