Beyond Community and Representation

Intergenerational Dialogue as Feminist Archival Praxis

Authors

  • Noa Sanders

Abstract

This article conceptualizes feminist archival praxis through the lens of intergenerational dialogue. Drawing on David Scott’s notion of generational problem-spaces, I argue that this framework offers a politically precise alternative to prevailing paradigms of archival responsibility centred on community or representation alone. Bringing together critical archival studies, feminist theory, and my own experience as an archival practitioner, I propose intergenerational dialogue as a hermeneutic method for apprehending the historically situated and often contradictory ethical horizons that shape archival practice. Reflecting on my work at Rise Up! Feminist Digital Archive, I show how dialogue across generations surfaces tensions over feminist activism and reshapes core archival functions, including appraisal, arrangement and description, and acquisition. Rather than pursuing a more complete representation of the past, this praxis foregrounds the epistemic conditions under which feminist pasts are rendered legible or obscured, thereby destabilizing linear accounts of Western feminism as a coherent or completed political project.

Author Biography

Noa Sanders

Noa Sanders is an archivist, writer, and organizer based in Toronto. They hold a BA in history and women and gender studies and a Master of Information degree in archives and records management from the University of Toronto. Their work engages queer, feminist, and decolonial memory practices, attuning to horizons of liberation within and beyond the archive.

Published

2026-06-18

How to Cite

Sanders, Noa. 2026. “Beyond Community and Representation: Intergenerational Dialogue As Feminist Archival Praxis ”. Archivaria 101 (June):192-214. https://archivaria.ca/index.php/archivaria/article/view/14093.

Issue

Section

Gordon Dodds Prize