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Abstract

Family archives, as repositories of cultural heritage, play a crucial role in preserving multi-generational knowledge. The family is the first collaborative unit in which community memory-keeping is operationalized. The family home is an archive or library of data for generations of family members living through historical movements, patterns of migration, and technological advancement. Thus, 'home' is a data-rich repository of local history. Memory-keeping tasks, such as recording events in family Bibles and maintaining photo albums, scrapbooks, and journals, are multi-generational literacy practices. The stories within a family archive endure, but the narrators may change over time. Archiving family cultural heritage is a robust yet unsung methodology for filling unacknowledged gaps in human history. The family archive is also an essential and undervalued site of meaning and identity construction, emphasizing these archives' personal and emotional significance. The proliferation of meanings in archives, particularly in familial histories, is attributed mainly as a symbol or metaphor for representing an identity, as a record of memory produced by people of a particular cultural setting.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.35492/docam/11/2/19

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