{"title":"Spotlight: Marisa Hicks-Alcaraz","authors":"Angela J. Aguayo","doi":"10.1353/cj.2023.a910936","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Spotlight:Marisa Hicks-Alcaraz Angela J. Aguayo Click for larger view View full resolution [End Page 5] Marisa Hicks-Alcaraz is a distinguished post-doctoral research associate at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. As a transdisciplinary scholar, she brings together digital race and ethnic studies, media arts practice and curation, liberationist political thought, US Latin American and Caribbean diasporic studies, intersectional feminism, and grassroots archival praxis. Her research aims to decenter Western ways of knowing and challenges extractivist and neoliberal practices by adopting a relational framework for publicly engaged scholarship. Her most recent projects focus on partnerships that support the remixing of personal archives to reclaim our stories and the recovery of independent filmmaking created by US-based Latinas in the Latina Film Recovery Project. Marisa received her PhD in Cultural Studies from Claremont Graduate University and MA in Cinema Studies from New York University. Interview by Angela J. Aguayo, an associate professor in the Department of Media and Cinema Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Angela J. Aguayo: Your current research is an innovative program of scholarship and community archiving focused on digital preservation and challenging the assumptions of its capitalist-colonial worldview. This scholarship involves an engaged practice of collaborating with communities on digital preservation of undocumented histories, foregrounding the stories and archives of underrepresented and misrepresented people. In using this framework, how do we avoid replicating the power dynamics we aim to dismantle? Marisa Hicks-Alcaraz: To do this, we need to keep looking critically at our own interventions. It's important to recognize that in navigating and negotiating dominant knowledge systems, we may inevitably reproduce the very parts of colonialism and capitalism that we have already identified as violent and in need of change. A part of this process is acknowledging the significant power differentials between ourselves and community partners and surrendering our power to work effectively and ethically. To me, this means showing humility and vulnerability. It means being conscious of my actions, owning up to my mistakes, and making plans to prevent future mistakes. And it means committing to nourishing the kinds of skills that involve consistent and repeated actions of respect, trust, and honest communication to form meaningful and flourishing relationships. This may not necessarily be a solution, but it can be a step forward. Aguayo: Your writing has appeared in the International Journal of Information, Diversity, & Inclusion; Feminist Media Histories; Interdisciplinary Digital Engagement in Arts & Humanities; and Reviews in Digital Humanities. The research questions you propose in these projects are essential to media and cinema studies: How does a critical analysis of power provide an understanding of how capitalist-colonialism underpins dominant digital preservation systems? What are some practical ways archivists and researchers can apply a relations-centered framework to digital preservation activities and approaches? Can you tell me a bit about what you are discovering in your work? Hicks-Alcaraz: Questioning the systems we participate in enacts a commitment to solidarity and regard for others in our communities. My own critical analysis of digital preservation principles and practices in community settings exposes underlying assumptions of access and ownership rooted in colonial and neoliberal systems. Take for instance the \"post-custodial\" model. [End Page 6] Post-custodialism is widely understood as a non-extractive, mutualistic approach that shares control with creators by managing digitized copies of their archival materials without obtaining physical custody (ownership) of them. While post-custodialism intervenes in the archival principle of custody, the management or stewardship of community records by archival institutions risks deepening inequity as creators are often required to grant perpetual control over the use, exhibition, and distribution of the digital copies made of their records without ongoing consent, the right to withdraw, or financial compensation. Mechanisms such as these, regardless of intention, contribute to the disempowerment and devaluation of historically excluded communities. Alternatively, a relations-centered approach to digital preservation challenges homogeneous power dynamics between archivist/researcher and community and responds to the increasing urgency for a deep sense of responsibility and connection to others. The following protocols are taken from a toolkit I'm currently developing with fellow ImaginX en Movimiento (IXeM) member and graphic designer Aldo Puicon.1 Rooted in...","PeriodicalId":55936,"journal":{"name":"JCMS-Journal of Cinema and Media Studies","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"JCMS-Journal of Cinema and Media Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/cj.2023.a910936","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"FILM, RADIO, TELEVISION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Spotlight:Marisa Hicks-Alcaraz Angela J. Aguayo Click for larger view View full resolution [End Page 5] Marisa Hicks-Alcaraz is a distinguished post-doctoral research associate at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. As a transdisciplinary scholar, she brings together digital race and ethnic studies, media arts practice and curation, liberationist political thought, US Latin American and Caribbean diasporic studies, intersectional feminism, and grassroots archival praxis. Her research aims to decenter Western ways of knowing and challenges extractivist and neoliberal practices by adopting a relational framework for publicly engaged scholarship. Her most recent projects focus on partnerships that support the remixing of personal archives to reclaim our stories and the recovery of independent filmmaking created by US-based Latinas in the Latina Film Recovery Project. Marisa received her PhD in Cultural Studies from Claremont Graduate University and MA in Cinema Studies from New York University. Interview by Angela J. Aguayo, an associate professor in the Department of Media and Cinema Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Angela J. Aguayo: Your current research is an innovative program of scholarship and community archiving focused on digital preservation and challenging the assumptions of its capitalist-colonial worldview. This scholarship involves an engaged practice of collaborating with communities on digital preservation of undocumented histories, foregrounding the stories and archives of underrepresented and misrepresented people. In using this framework, how do we avoid replicating the power dynamics we aim to dismantle? Marisa Hicks-Alcaraz: To do this, we need to keep looking critically at our own interventions. It's important to recognize that in navigating and negotiating dominant knowledge systems, we may inevitably reproduce the very parts of colonialism and capitalism that we have already identified as violent and in need of change. A part of this process is acknowledging the significant power differentials between ourselves and community partners and surrendering our power to work effectively and ethically. To me, this means showing humility and vulnerability. It means being conscious of my actions, owning up to my mistakes, and making plans to prevent future mistakes. And it means committing to nourishing the kinds of skills that involve consistent and repeated actions of respect, trust, and honest communication to form meaningful and flourishing relationships. This may not necessarily be a solution, but it can be a step forward. Aguayo: Your writing has appeared in the International Journal of Information, Diversity, & Inclusion; Feminist Media Histories; Interdisciplinary Digital Engagement in Arts & Humanities; and Reviews in Digital Humanities. The research questions you propose in these projects are essential to media and cinema studies: How does a critical analysis of power provide an understanding of how capitalist-colonialism underpins dominant digital preservation systems? What are some practical ways archivists and researchers can apply a relations-centered framework to digital preservation activities and approaches? Can you tell me a bit about what you are discovering in your work? Hicks-Alcaraz: Questioning the systems we participate in enacts a commitment to solidarity and regard for others in our communities. My own critical analysis of digital preservation principles and practices in community settings exposes underlying assumptions of access and ownership rooted in colonial and neoliberal systems. Take for instance the "post-custodial" model. [End Page 6] Post-custodialism is widely understood as a non-extractive, mutualistic approach that shares control with creators by managing digitized copies of their archival materials without obtaining physical custody (ownership) of them. While post-custodialism intervenes in the archival principle of custody, the management or stewardship of community records by archival institutions risks deepening inequity as creators are often required to grant perpetual control over the use, exhibition, and distribution of the digital copies made of their records without ongoing consent, the right to withdraw, or financial compensation. Mechanisms such as these, regardless of intention, contribute to the disempowerment and devaluation of historically excluded communities. Alternatively, a relations-centered approach to digital preservation challenges homogeneous power dynamics between archivist/researcher and community and responds to the increasing urgency for a deep sense of responsibility and connection to others. The following protocols are taken from a toolkit I'm currently developing with fellow ImaginX en Movimiento (IXeM) member and graphic designer Aldo Puicon.1 Rooted in...
玛丽莎·希克斯-阿尔卡拉兹安吉拉·阿瓜约点击查看大图查看全分辨率[结束页5]玛丽莎·希克斯-阿尔卡拉兹是伊利诺伊大学厄巴纳-香槟分校的杰出博士后研究员。作为一名跨学科学者,她汇集了数字种族和民族研究,媒体艺术实践和策展,解放主义政治思想,美国拉丁美洲和加勒比流散研究,交叉女权主义和基层档案实践。她的研究旨在通过采用公共参与学术的关系框架来分散西方的认识方式并挑战采掘主义者和新自由主义实践。她最近的项目集中在合作伙伴关系上,支持个人档案的重新混合,以收回我们的故事,并在拉丁电影恢复项目中恢复由美国拉丁裔创造的独立电影制作。玛丽莎获得克莱蒙特研究生大学文化研究博士学位和纽约大学电影研究硕士学位。采访作者安吉拉·j·阿瓜约,伊利诺伊大学厄巴纳-香槟分校媒体与电影研究系副教授。安吉拉·j·阿瓜约:你目前的研究是一个创新的学术和社区档案项目,专注于数字保存,并挑战其资本主义殖民世界观的假设。该奖学金涉及与社区合作,以数字方式保存未记录的历史,突出未被充分代表和被歪曲的人的故事和档案。在使用这个框架时,我们如何避免复制我们想要拆除的权力动态?玛丽莎·希克斯-阿尔卡拉兹:要做到这一点,我们需要不断批判地审视我们自己的干预措施。重要的是要认识到,在主导知识体系的导航和谈判中,我们可能不可避免地再现殖民主义和资本主义的某些部分,这些部分我们已经认为是暴力的,需要改变。这个过程的一部分是承认我们和社区伙伴之间的巨大权力差异,并放弃我们有效和道德地工作的权力。对我来说,这意味着表现出谦卑和脆弱。它意味着意识到我的行为,承认我的错误,并制定计划以防止未来的错误。这意味着致力于培养各种技能,包括持续和重复的尊重、信任和诚实沟通的行为,以形成有意义和繁荣的关系。这可能不一定是一个解决方案,但它可以是向前迈出的一步。阿瓜约:你的文章发表在《国际信息、多样性和包容性杂志》上;女性主义媒体史;艺术与人文学科的跨学科数字参与和数字人文评论。你在这些项目中提出的研究问题对媒体和电影研究至关重要:对权力的批判性分析如何提供对资本主义殖民主义如何支撑占主导地位的数字保存系统的理解?档案工作者和研究人员将以关系为中心的框架应用于数字保存活动和方法的一些实际方法是什么?你能告诉我你在工作中发现了什么吗?希克斯-阿尔卡拉兹:质疑我们所参与的系统,是对我们社区中团结和尊重他人的承诺。我自己对社区环境中数字保存原则和实践的批判性分析揭示了根植于殖民和新自由主义制度的访问和所有权的潜在假设。以“后保管”模式为例。后保管主义被广泛理解为一种非提取的、互惠的方法,通过管理其档案材料的数字化副本,与创作者共享控制权,而无需获得它们的物理保管(所有权)。虽然后保管主义干预了保管的档案原则,但档案机构对社区记录的管理或管理可能会加剧不平等,因为创作者往往需要在没有持续同意、撤回权或经济补偿的情况下,对其记录的数字副本的使用、展示和分发授予永久控制权。诸如此类的机制,无论其意图如何,都会导致历史上被排斥的社区丧失权力和贬值。另外,以关系为中心的数字保存方法挑战了档案保管员/研究人员和社区之间的同质权力动态,并响应了对深刻责任感和与他人联系的日益紧迫的需求。以下协议取自我目前与ImaginX en Movimiento (IXeM)成员、平面设计师Aldo puicon一起开发的工具包。