9
Archive stories, archive realities
Jared Davidson
10
Jared Davidson is a labour historian
and research archivist based in
Wellington, New Zealand. He is the
author of three books, including
Dead Letters: Censorship and Subversion
in New Zealand 1914–1920 (Otago
University Press, 2019), as well as
the co-authored He Whakaputanga:
The Declaration of Independence,
1835 (BWB, 2017). His writing for
Overland, History Workshop Journal,
NZ History and others can be found
at www.jared-davidson.com.
In May 1840, a furious William Hobson learned from a passing ship’s captain
that the New Zealand Company in Wellington had set up its own form of
government. Stinging from the usurped authority and high treason of the
colonists, Lieutenant-Governor Hobson issued two proclamations. In the
name of Her Majesty, Hobson claimed sovereignty over Aotearoa New
Zealand. The North Island was claimed by cession via Te Tiriti o Waitangi
(despite the fact that hui with rangatira were still being held across the
country, and despite having only two signed sheets in his possession). The
South Island was claimed based on Captain James Cook’s ‘discovery’.
Having asserted sovereignty with the stroke of a pen and the stamp of
a Paihia printing press, Hobson hastily despatched Colonial Secretary
Willoughby Shortland to Wellington. With him were troops from the
80th Regiment, mounted police and orders to dismantle any New Zealand
Company council, flags or insignia he found. They arrived on the
evening of 2 June and sent copies of Hobson’s proclamations ashore, but
Wellington weather prevented an official landing. Shortland and four
members of the police force finally landed near Pipitea Pā on the afternoon
of 4 June, where they were met by Colonel Wakefield and others of the
New Zealand Company. Here, Shortland read Hobson’s proclamations, and
the legal fiction of crown sovereignty was officially enacted.
The proclamations of sovereignty were indeed a legal fiction, for they
ignored some crucial caveats: those who signed Te Tiriti o Waitangi signed
a Māori-language document that never ceded sovereignty, and in tikanga
Māori, or Māori law, ceding sovereignty was impossible.1
Hobson’s claim of discovery stretched legal fiction into pure fantasy.
‘There is a certain strange magic in the belief that waving a piece of
coloured cloth could transfer indigenous lands to someone else,’ notes
Moana Jackson, ‘but it was a theatre that had long been established in
the law of all European colonisers. The fact that it would have had no
legitimacy in the law of the Indigenous Peoples being “discovered” was
never deemed to be relevant.’2
This magical realism – ‘legal and political gymnastics performed behind
a veil of apparently reasoned justification’ – was, and is, made possible
by the stories, symbols and statecraft that are public archives.3 Te Tiriti
o Waitangi is an obvious example. As legal documents and ‘Talmudic
symbols of imagined imperial symbiosis’, writes Adele Perry, treaties,
like flags, have served colonial projects the world over.4 Others include
11
the 1839 appointment of Hobson as Lieutenant-Governor, the letters
patent that made Aotearoa New Zealand a colony of New South Wales,
the pre-Tiriti proclamations of 30 January 1840 that assumed a power
not yet granted and the May proclamations themselves, as bungled and
back-dated as they were (the South Island proclamation had to be reissued
because Hobson left off the grounds for sovereignty on the copy he sent to
London, and the North Island proclamation was incorrectly back-dated to
5 February instead of 6 February).
Together these documents formed the earliest holdings of Aotearoa New
Zealand’s public archive, Te Rua Mahara o te Kāwanatanga Archives New
Zealand.5 They joined the larger imperial archive, ‘a fantasy of knowledge
collected and united in the service of state and Empire’.6 In this fantasy,
world mastery was possible through documentation and the public
knowledge stored within the ‘total-archive’.7
Fiction, magic and fantasy are not words most people would associate with
public archives. As the official guardian of government records, Archives
New Zealand is tasked with ensuring confidence in the integrity of public
and local authority archives. Enabling trusted government information
is its mantra. Weaving in and out of public discourse and supplementing
the many sources of public knowledge, public archives often act as
uncontested stand-ins for ‘the facts’ or ‘the Truth’. As written documents
of evidential value, they sit at the ‘authentic’ end of the knowledge
continuum, where they are contrasted with less-trustworthy sources of
public knowledge such as oral testimony and fake news.
Yet at their most basic, archives are stories. All peoples use archives as
stories, whether transmitted through speech, written in text, woven within
tāniko patterns or embodied in tā moko, performed as ritual or shared
in everyday practices, or displayed in objects or in the land itself. Using
Te Tiriti o Waitangi to weave a story of sovereignty was not limited to the
colony’s fledgling civil service. Many Māori descendants of those who
signed, especially Ngāpuhi-nui-tonu, have pointed to the Māori-language
document and the sacred covenant of its terms as a way of acknowledging
both their tino rangatiratanga and their centrality to the event.
When brought together as a public archive in the form of a state
institution, archives are amplified into a grandiose narrative of
nationhood—a metanarrative. Indeed, some theorists go so far as to claim
there is no state without archives.8
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Jared Davidson
This is because archives have power. And in turn, archives are created
and shaped by ever-contested power relations. Public archives are not
‘passive storehouses of old stuff, but active sites where social power is
negotiated, contested, confirmed.’9 Their holdings ‘wield power over the
shape and direction of historical scholarship, collective memory, and
national identity, over how we know ourselves as individuals, groups, and
societies’.10 Archives allow people to marshal stories and to make meaning.
Archives are the very possibility of politics.11
As Hobson’s actions and subsequent governments show, Aotearoa New
Zealand’s public archive has always been about power. Stradling the
intersection of past, present and future, it has its origin in capitalism’s
vampire-like need to turn all of life into work for its own reproduction.12
Many of the seven million plus archives held in the repositories of
Archives New Zealand reflect, and serve as justification for, the gendered,
racialised class relations that created them. Because of this, certain voices
in the archive have been privileged over others. Silences abound.
Archival power is, in part, the power to allow voices to be heard.
It consists of highlighting certain narratives and of including
certain types of records created by certain groups. The power of the
archive is witnessed in the act of inclusion, but this is only one of its
components. The power to exclude is a fundamental aspect of the
archive. Inevitably, there are distortions, omissions, erasures, and
silences in the archive. Not every story is told.13
Despite this, public archives are also potential sites for resistance,
counter-narratives and enriching the public knowledge commons. In
today’s cybernetic vortex of class power and commodification, archives
and their emphasis on context are more relevant than ever.14
There is a huge body of work on the relationship between memory and
stories, archives and power. It weaves through many disciplines and in
and out of academia. We might think of the novels of George Orwell,
such as 1984, or the importance of archives in Star Wars, from the plans
of the Death Star to the location of the last Jedi. In the final season of
Game of Thrones, Bran Stark reveals the archival motive of the Night King:
‘He wants to erase this world and I am its memory.’ As an archive, Bran
becomes a target for erasure.
Archive stories, archive realities
13
Those of the nascent labour force in Europe – whose activities were
recorded and controlled by the state to become more legible to the state
(hence the creation of parish registers, birth certificates and censuses) –
certainly knew of their power. It is telling how many peasant rebellions
began with the destruction of official archives. Writing of the introduction
of the capitalist wage relation and the violent enclosure of the commons,
Silvia Federici notes how people organised themselves into bands, raided
manors and land registries and destroyed the archives ‘where the written
marks of their servitude were kept’.15
The state knew too. Countless examples of the state destroying archives
litter history—the recent Mau Mau and Windrush scandals in Britain are
prime examples.16 In New Zealand, there was no public archive institution
until 1956. Government agencies could pretty much do what they liked
with their archives. As a result, only 3 to 4 per cent of everything ever
created by government has survived. The New Zealand Police Force
archives, for example, are woefully patchy for the years between 1900–
1950 due to an in-house purge of records – only a sample of high-profile
murder cases were kept. Police record books note detailed files on labour
movement leaders and others deemed threatening to the state, but the
files themselves no longer exist.17
The state also launched successive waves of attack on the archives of
te ao Māori, for these represented te māramatanga o ngā tikanga, the
philosophy of law deeply interwoven throughout Māori life, and were
therefore incompatible with colonial authority.18 Pākehā governments
supressed tā moko, punished the practice of tohunga, sanctioned the
beating of Māori-language speakers in school and paved highways over
wāhi tapu, violently divorcing Māori from their philosophical base. In
doing so, the colonial archive not only dismissed the Māori word and
replaced it with the Pākehā word, it made colonised ‘others’ available to
the extractive enterprises of colonial capital.19
Despite this acknowledgement of archival power by the state, throughout
the twentieth century, public archives were seen as passive, objective and
neutral. The public archivist was an impartial custodian – interpretation
was the job of those using archives and not that of the archivist. ‘The good
Archivist’, wrote Sir Hilary Jenkinson, the grandfather of the Western
archival canon, was ‘perhaps the most selfless devotee of Truth the
modern world produces.’20 Archives were the evidence from which Truth
(with a capital ‘T’) could be found.
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Jared Davidson
More recently, the post-custodial turn has challenged this view. A
questioning of the profession’s objectivity has reframed or refigured
archives and archival institutions. There has been a move from archiveas-source to archive-as-subject.21 Archives are increasingly viewed as
social constructs – they don’t simply ‘arrive or emerge fully formed, nor
are they innocent of struggles for power in either their creation or their
interpretive applications . . . all archives come into being in and as history
as a result of specific political, cultural, and socioeconomic pressures.’22
Feminist and indigenous scholarship has exposed the gendered, colonial
nature of archives, while ethnographic approaches denaturalise the
archive to show how people encounter, interpret and make use of them
as living and dynamic spaces.23 The evidential nature of their contents
have also been questioned: no longer can we think of archives as the
simple bearers of fact or truth. Just as much as oral testimony, a written
document reflects the biases and needs of its creator.
What does this mean for public knowledge? It means that public archives
should be viewed not as mere sites of knowledge retrieval, but as sites of
knowledge production in both the past and the present.24 And this is a
good thing. For it is as a site of knowledge production that public archives
become important for counter-narratives. It allows us to read its holdings
against and along the grain, to notice the gaps, to hear the silences and
to tell the stories that have not been told.25 Archives read this way can
challenge state power or hold that power to account. And, ideally, it can
help the circulation of struggles and create possibilities that go beyond
hierarchical, statist forms of power. If in one reading there is no state
without archives, another reading suggests that ‘the very existence of the
archive constitutes a threat to the state’.26
The value of public archives for those challenging power or creating
counter-power depends on its use. Free and open access to public
archives is therefore an important issue. Like Te Tiriti o Waitangi, the
metanarrative of the public archive is ever vulnerable to changing
governments and changing priorities. Or, in plain speak, the public
archive is a political football – where it lands depends on who is kicking it.
In the archival profession access often comes second to the acquisition
or preservation of records. Faced with unwieldy paper-finding aids or
online search engines with outdated, incorrect or zero metadata, users
Archive stories, archive realities
15
not only have to deal with organising principles totally different from
those of a library, such as provenance and original order, but often have
no meaningful way to find and access what they need. This is even more
telling in our colonial context. Māori users of the public archive must
also grapple with the privileging of Pākehā terms over te reo Māori
(many of which are misspelt), non-indigenous systems of knowledge,
monocultural spaces and institutional anxiety, and the historical trauma
of dispossession and deprivation. 27 As one Māori participant in a study of
non-users noted:
there are all sorts of ways that people are disenfranchised from
accessing information [at archives] – whether that’s various kinds of
literacy i.e. the most basic literacy, or literacy on the level of being
able to filter and understand the particular languages that are used by
officialdom. And also that emotional reality of being disenfranchised
– what’s your motivation to access information and know about the
particulars of your disenfranchisement if you don’t have hope for
things being different?28
The post-custodial turn has thankfully placed a greater importance on
access within public archives. As well as culturally appropriate spatial
design and the increasing use of Māori-intuitive metadata, there has been
a steady investment in digitisation. Digitisation is not the cure-all solution
many think it is, but it has undeniably changed the nature of archival
access.29 Digital divides and digital literacies aside, the digitisation of
archives has made them more accessible than ever before, allowing users
to shape public discourse and dissent within the information age. Online
search engines, global databases and crowdsourcing platforms have made
millions of digital surrogates available to view or download from one’s
personal device. Where before a researcher had no choice but to visit the
archive, they can now access, use and re-use digital archives anywhere,
any time – unless, of course, they are locked behind a paywall. More and
more digital archives are finding their way into educational resources,
policy documents, family and local histories and mainstream media,
while machine-reading technology allows the automated transcription of
digitised handwritten documents, making them discoverable to Google
and other web crawlers.
However, we need to remind ourselves that today’s knowledge economy
rests on very material relations of domination and exploitation;
automation and immiseration; colonisation and incarceration. It is no
16
Jared Davidson
coincidence that internet fibre optic cables trace the trade routes of former
empires, or that the cloud – which the New Zealand government has
directed its agencies to privilege over other digital storage systems – has
its data warehouses in disputed post-colonial territories in order to exploit
their ambiguous status, raising the issue of Māori data sovereignty.30
The extraction of raw materials needed for the information age destroys
both land and labour across the globe, while the computer industry’s
use of toxic substances makes places like Silicon Valley – the bastion
of cybernetic capital – home to some of the highest concentrations of
hazardous waste sites in the United States.31 The gap between the rich
and poor there is particularly stark, as the work of elite, highly paid
programmers (the cognitariat) is made possible by low-paid and gendered
labour.32 For Marxist author Nick Dyer-Witheford, ‘the conjunction of
automation and globalization enabled by information technology raises
to a new intensity a fundamental dynamic of capitalism – its drive
to simultaneously draw people into waged labour and expel them as
superfluous un- or underemployed.’33 Like the service workers of Silicon
Valley, these are often women, indigenous peoples or people of colour.
They are the same people who fill prison cells and whose labour is then
used to continue the circulation of capital. FamilySearch, one the world’s
biggest genealogical sites and the host of digitised archives from Archives
New Zealand, uses prison labour to digitise and index its holdings.34
Archives do not exist in a vacuum. It would be wrong to believe the power
of archives is present outside of concrete relations between people, and
that archives in themselves possess all the powers attributed to them.
Archives, like information, must be made and used.35 It is also naïve to
believe that discourse informed by public knowledge is enough to undo
these relations.
Which brings us all the way back to archives as stories and public archives
as sites of knowledge production. Despite what this chapter might seem
to suggest, understanding archives as social constructs shaped by material
social relations is a strength. If ‘the task is less to distinguish fiction from
fact than to track the production and consumption of those facticities
themselves’, then context is everything.36 After all, the most cherished
organising principle of the archival profession is context. It is context
that allows us to make sense of an archive and its content, and to place
it in relation to others. It is context that can unveil the legal fictions and
metanarratives both inside and outside of the public archive. It is in this
sense that an understanding of context is radical, in the original meaning
Archive stories, archive realities
17
of the term (of relating to a root, to get to the root of something). Because
if we truly want to get at the root of the social and ecological disaster that
is capitalism, knowledge in itself is not enough. Knowledge must be used,
and in ways that radically rupture and reorient our current modes of
relationship – including our relationship to knowledge itself.
Notes
1. Moana Jackson, “The Treaty and the Word:
the Colonization of Māori Philosophy”
in Justice, Ethics, and New Zealand Society, eds.
Graham Oddie and Roy W. Perrett (Australia
and New Zealand: Oxford University Press,
1992), 1–10. This was confirmed by the
Waitangi Tribunal’s 2014 finding that by
signing Te Tiriti o Waitangi, Ngāpuhi – and
by extension other signatories – never
ceded sovereignty. Waitangi Tribunal, He
Whakaputanga me te Tiriti/The Declaration and
the Treaty: The Report on Stage 1 of the Te Paparahi
o Te Raki Inquiry (Wai 1040, 2014).
2. Moana Jackson, “James Cook and our
monuments to colonisation,” E-Tangata,
accessed June 3, 2019, https://e-tangata.
co.nz/comment-and-analysis/james-cookand-our-monuments-to-colonisation/.
3. Jackson, “The Treaty and the Word.”
4. Adele Perry, “The Colonial Archive on
Trial: Possession, Dispossession, and History
in Delgamuukw v. British Columbia,” in
Archive Stories: Facts, Fictions and the Writing
of History, ed. Antoinette Burton (Durham:
Duke University Press, 2005), 325.
5. Incidentally, the largest repository of
Archives New Zealand sits on the former
lands of Pipitea Pā in Wellington.
6. Thomas Richards, The Imperial Archive:
Knowledge and the Fantasy of Empire (London:
Verso, 1993), 6.
18
7. Tony Ballantyne, “Archive, Discipline,
State: Power and Knowledge in South Asian
Historiography,” New Zealand Journal of Asian
Studies, 3, no. 1 (2001): 90.
8. Achille Mbembe, “The Power of the
Archive and Its Limits,” in Refiguring the
Archive, eds. Carolyn Hamilton, Verne Harris,
Jane Taylor, Michele Pickover, Graeme Reid
and Razia Saleh (Cape Town: New Africa
Books, 2002), 23.
9. Joan Schwartz and Terry Cook, “Archives,
Records, and Power: The Making of Modern
Memory,” in Archival Science, no. 2 (2002): 1–2.
10. Schwartz and Cook, “Archives, Records,
and Power,” 2.
11. Verne Harris, Archives and Justice: A South
African Perspective (Chicago: The Society of
American Archivists, 2007), 345. See also
Randall Jimerson, Archives Power: Memory,
Accountability, and Social Justice (Chicago:
Society of American Archivists, 2009).
12. For an indigenous understanding of
Marx’s concept of primitive accumulation
and capitalist modes of production
as ‘modes’ or ‘forms of life’ see Glenn
Coulthard, “The Colonialism of the Present,”
Jacobin, accessed May 30, 2019, https://www.
jacobinmag.com/2015/01/indigenous-leftglen-coulthard-interview/ and Coulthard,
Red Skin, White Masks: Rejecting the Colonial
Politics of Recognition (Minnesota: University
of Minnesota Press, 2014).
Jared Davidson
13. Rodney Carter, “Of Things Said and
Unsaid: Power, Archival Silences, and Power
in Silence,” in Archivaria, no. 61 (2016): 216.
14. For more on the cybernetic vortex, see
Nick Dyer-Witheford, Cyber-Proletariat: Global
Labour in the Digital Vortex (London: Pluto
Press, 2015) and his earlier work, Cyber-Marx:
Cycles and Circuits of Struggle in High-technology
Capitalism (Illinois: University of Illinois
Press, 1999), which draw upon autonomist
Marxist traditions. For Dyer-Witheford,
‘contemporary capital increasingly
subordinates the reproduction of variable
capital (humans) to that of the fixed capital
(machines) of which the capitalist class is
the personified representative. This is an
accelerating movement that proceeds by
intermediate cyborg or symbiant stages
towards even higher levels of automation.
In this process, the creation of surplus
populations, appearing in various forms of
precarity, informal work, unemployment
and destitution in differentiated global
zones becomes the characteristic form of
proletarianization,’ Cyber-Proletariat, 196.
15. Silvia Federici, Caliban and the Witch:
Women, the Body, and Primitive Accumulation
(New York: Autonomedia, 2004), 45.
16. In 2012 it was discovered that thousands
of documents detailing crimes committed
during the final years of the British empire
were systematically destroyed or secretly
withheld from the public. The discovery
came after a group of Kenyans detained
and allegedly tortured during the Mau
Mau rebellion won the right to sue the
British government, and access previously
hidden files. More recently, in 2018, it was
discovered that the British Home Office
had destroyed thousands of landing card
slips recording Windrush immigrants’
arrival dates in the United Kingdom, an
important source of residency status for
older Caribbean-born residents. For a
useful introduction to state destruction of
Archive stories, archive realities
archives, see Eric Ketelaar, “Recordkeeping
and Societal Power,” in Archives: Recordkeeping
in Society, eds. Sue McKemmish, Michael
Piggott, Barbara Reed and Frank Upward
(Wagga-Wagga: Charles Sturt University,
2005), 277–298.
17. For more on this topic, see Jared
Davidson, Dead Letters: Censorship and
Subversion in New Zealand 1914–1920 (Dunedin:
Otago University Press, 2019).
18. Jackson, “The Treaty and the Word.”
19. Tony Ballantyne, “Littoral Literacy:
Sealers, Whalers, and the Entanglements
of Empire,” in Critical Perspectives on
Colonialism: Writing the Empire from Below,
eds. Fiona Paisley and Kirsty Reid (New
York: Routledge, 2014), 160. See also Tony
Ballantyne, Webs of Empire: Locating New
Zealand’s Colonial Past (Wellington: Bridget
Williams Books, 2012).
20. Hilary Jenkinson, “British Archives and
The War,” in The American Archivist 7, no. 1
(1944): 1–17.
21. Ann Laura Stoler, “Colonial Archives and
the Arts of Governance: On the Content in
the Form’ in Refiguring the Archive, eds. Carolyn
Hamilton, Verne Harris, Jane Taylor, Michele
Pickover, Graeme Reid and Razia Saleh (Cape
Town: New Africa Books, 2002), 86.
22. Antoinette Burton, “Introduction:
Archive Fever, Archive Stories,” in Archive
Stories: Facts, Fictions, and the Writing of History,
ed. Antoinette Burton (Durham and London:
Duke University Press, 2005), 6.
19
23. Kirsty Reid and Fiona Paisley,
“Introduction,” in Sources and Methods in
Histories of Colonialism: Approaching the Imperial
Archive, eds. Kirsty Reid and Fiona Paisley
(New York: Routledge, 2017), 5. See also
Carolyn Steedman, Dust: The Archive and
Cultural History (Manchester: Manchester
University Press, 2002).
24. Stoler, “Colonial Archives and the Arts of
Governance,” 85.
25. For more on reading archives along
the archival grain, see Ann Laura Stoler,
Along the Archival Grain: Epistemic Anxieties
and Colonial Common Sense (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 2009). For a
summary of ‘history from below’ see Jared
Davidson, “History from Below: A Reading
List with Marcus Rediker,” History Workshop
Journal, accessed June 10, 2019, http://www.
historyworkshop.org.uk/history-frombelow-a-reading-list-with-marcus-rediker/.
26. Mbembe, “The Power of the Archive and
Its Limits,” 23.
27. See Jared Davidson, “Colonial
Continuum: Archives, Access and Power,” in
Archifacts (April 2015): 17–24.
28. Jared Davidson, “Out of Sight, Out
of Mind? Non-user Understandings
of Archives in Aotearoa New Zealand”
(Master’s Thesis, Victoria University of
Wellington, 2014), 23.
29. Issues of labour time and the cost of both
digitisation equipment and ongoing digital
storage costs often gets lost in the demand to
‘digitise everything and put it online’, as do
questions of data sovereignty and cultural
and intellectual property rights.
31. Dyer-Witheford, Cyber-Marx, 235.
32. On the cognitariat and the role of
knowledge and knowledge commons in
cognitive capitalism, see Carlo Vercellone,
“From the Mass-Worker to Cognitive
Labour: Historical and Theoretical
Considerations” in Beyond Marx: Theorising
the Global Labour Relations of the Twenty-First
Century, eds. Marcel van der Linden and
Karl Heinz Roth (Leiden and Boston: Brill
2014), 440.
33. Dyer-Witheford, Cyber-Proletariat, 15. On
the phenomenon of capital’s creation of
surplus populations and resistance to it, see
Joshua Clover, Riot. Strike. Riot: The New Era of
Uprisings (London: Verso, 2016).
34. Shane Bauer, “Your Family’s
Genealogical Records May Have Been
Digitized by a Prisoner,” Mother Jones,
accessed June 4, 2019, https://www.
motherjones.com/politics/2015/08/
mormon-church-prison-geneology-familysearch/. See also Archives and the Old
Mole, “Ancestry, Ancestry, White Power,
and Corpsefucking,” accessed June 4,
2019, https://archivesoldmole.wordpress.
com/2016/01/23/ancestry-ancestry-whitepower-and-corpsefucking/.
35. To paraphrase Richards, The Imperial
Archive, 73.
36. Stoler, “Colonial Archives and the Arts of
Governance,” 85.
30. See James Bridle, New Dark Age: Technology
and the End of the Future (London: Verso, 2018).
20
Jared Davidson