Nothing Much was Lost: Tracing Archival Creation at the ALFA archive
Jessica Lapp will present "Nothing Much was Lost: Tracing Archival Creation at the ALFA archive."
Jessica Lapp is an Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Information, where she studies feminist archival practice and process, provenance, and records creation. Her current SSHRC-funded project, ‘Reproduction and Rebirth,’ explores the creation and use of digital surrogate records in artistic practice. Her work has been published in Australian Feminist Studies, Archival Science, and Information & Culture. Dr. Lapp is currently working with U. of I. iSchool Professors Emily Maemura and Karen Wickett on the Archives as Data project.
Abstract:
This talk traces the history of the Atlanta Lesbian Feminist Alliance (ALFA) Archives, currently located in the Rubenstein Library at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. During its active period between 1972-1994, ALFA was one of the most significant Southern lesbian feminist activist organisations. In the 1980s, it established a formal archival arm to legitimise its activities and status as a not-for-profit. Here in 2026, the ALFA archive has been a university collection longer than it was ever a community one. ALFA’s evolution demonstrates tensions between archiving the self and archiving the collective, navigating blurred distinctions between creating a record and creating an archive and incorporating lesbian feminist process as archival practice. The tensions are illustrated to demonstrate how traditional Western understandings of ‘archival creation’’ and ‘archival practice’ become challenged by the vast array of social, cultural and political entanglements that influence, shape and constrain lesbian feminist memory-making.
Questions? Contact Emily Maemura.