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October 6, 2016 - Comments Off on LAAC Book Club No. 10

LAAC Book Club No. 10

Join us for our tenth reading and meeting of the LAAC Book Club--where LA-area archivists and friends read and discuss publications exploring all matters archives.

Our next book selection is Make Your Own History: Documenting Feminist and Queer Activism in the 21st Century by Kelly Wooten and Lyz Bly.

51vzb3lq7tl-_sx331_bo1204203200_Publisher’s Description: Make Your Own History: Documenting Feminist and Queer Activism in the 21st Century addresses the practical and theoretical challenges and advantages of researching, documenting, and archiving recent and contemporary activists in the feminist and queer movements. In the last few decades, the place and practice of activism has shifted from a physical "headquarters" where activists convene to plan and strategize, to the reality where planning happens at various desks and kitchen tables across the country (or world) and activists then convene at one site for an action (the prime example of this being the WTO protest in Seattle in 1999). So much of the work is taking place in the digital environment and/or within smaller do-it-yourself (DIY) and anarchist subcultures where ideas are often shared via zines and other ephemeral materials. The challenge of the archivist and the scholar, whose work is traditionally paper-based, is to keep up with the changing modes of communication of these individuals and organizations and to make sure these activists' work is not left out of the historical record.

Activists, archivists, librarians, and scholars address the following issues and topics: the practical material challenges of documenting and archiving contemporary activism; theoretical perspectives and conversations; online communities and communications; "third wave" feminism/youth and queer cultures/subcultures; the move from paper to digital archives and documents; zines; and the work of activists who employ creative/artistic/cultural approaches to work for social justice.


The group will meet on Thursday, October 27, from 6:30-8 pm at Canter’s (419 N Fairfax Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90036). Participants to the Book Club will be capped at 12. Please email laacollective@gmail.com to reserve a spot.

Can’t make the meeting, but are still reading the book? Let us know!

 

October 5, 2016 - Comments Off on LAAC Fall Community Planning Meeting

LAAC Fall Community Planning Meeting

All LAAC members are invited to the Los Angeles Archivists Collective Community Planning Meeting on Sunday, November 6 at 3:00 pm at Verdugo Bar in Glassell Park.

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Union Brewing Co., Group Portrait. ca 1910, Anaheim Public Library photograph collection on Anaheim local history

 

Verdugo Bar
3408 Verdugo Rd
Los Angeles, CA 90065

We will meet at the outside patio.

 

 

 

 

Subcommittees will be reporting on their accomplishments for the year. We are also going to discuss our financial sustainability through a plan to join the Society of California Archivists as an Affinity Group. We’ll also open up the floor for feedback and brainstorming

Meeting Minutes will be posted to the LAAC Google Group. Anyone unable to attend is encouraged to email agenda items to laacollective@gmail.com

*Sunday, November 6 is the end of Daylight Savings. Be sure to “fall back” an hour!

September 2, 2016 - Comments Off on Go For Broke National Education Center Tour

Go For Broke National Education Center Tour

Please join the Los Angeles Archivists Collective for a tour of the Go For Broke National Education Center on Wednesday, September 21, 2016 at 1:00 pm.

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Japanese-American troops of 100th Infantry Battalion of US 442nd Regimental Combat Team leaving for regimental reserve after 16 days of fighting, Castellina Sector, near Livorno, Italy, 15 Jul 1944 Source Hawaii War Records Depository

The Go For Broke National Educational Center is a national non-profit organization with a mission to preserve the story and legacy of American veterans of Japanese ancestry, who served in the United States military during World War II.

Located in Little Tokyo’s historic district, the GFBNEC’s new The Defining Courage Experience exhibit offers visitors real-life examples of heroism and sacrifice by incorporating photographs and footage from a vast library of more than 1,150 oral history interviews of Japanese-American World War II veterans. Many of the veterans interviewed were born and raised in Los Angeles and its surrounding areas and their videotaped interviews provide visitors with stories about the neighborhoods in which they lived and worked, as well as the larger Japanese-American Community in and around Los Angeles. What’s more visitors will hear the veterans’ unique viewpoints as minorities of a pre-war and post-war Los Angeles, as well as their experiences during the period of forced removal and incarceration of Japanese-Americans. Today, The GRBNEC focuses on providing a place and means by which all people can share their stories and recognize how the legacy of these veterans contributes to the history of Los Angeles and the American ideals of freedom and equal opportunity for all.

To attend, please RSVP here. Parking instructions will be provided to those who RSVP.

July 20, 2016 - 1 comment.

Conversations in the Park: Community Engagement

This summer, join your peers and special guest speakers for "Conversations in the Park" - a series of talks in our lovely city parks, brought to you by the LAAC Subcommittee on Community Outreach and Advocacy. Bring snacks!

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Soldier and girlfriend in canoe 1943, Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection

Join us for the last meetup in our summer “Conversations in the Park” series at Echo Park Lake on Sunday, August 14th from 3-5 pm. We’ll be discussing community engagement with guest speakers Kelly Besser (UCLA Library Special Collections), Roderic Crooks (UC Irvine), and Manuel Escamilla (City of Santa Ana). Besser and Crooks will speak to their work with the Miracle Bookmobile; Escamilla will discuss projects at Santa Ana Public Library and the City of Santa Ana. The group will meet on the green space near the Boathouse.