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Archiving memories of changing flood risk: Interdisciplinary explorations around knowledge for resilience

McEwen, L.; Reeves, D; Brice, J; Meadley, F.K; Lewis, K; Macdonald, N

Authors

Lindsey McEwen Lindsey.Mcewen@uwe.ac.uk
Professor in Environmental Management

D Reeves

J Brice

F.K Meadley

K Lewis

N Macdonald



Abstract

The paper explores the changing nature of the flood archive drawing on different disciplinary perspectives, approaches and attitudes. It uses a braiding metaphor to map a journey around shifting islands that contain different primary research on flood archives - in expert hydrology, in lay flood knowledges, in capturing flood narratives and memories, in drawing on folk song as an informal archive, and in charting archives for a fluid landscape. The narrative and critical commentary ‘in the flow’ draws out interlinking themes, exploring what forms of archive can capture, and share reflections on, a landscape that is increasingly or episodically wet – a fluid landscape? It explores different facets of the flood archive: in terms of fact versus fiction, the changing nature of material archived, who archives, changing archival practice, changing use of archives, and future archives. It concludes
that informal archives have the potential to form a key resource in communities learning to live with changing flood risk and uncertainty.

Citation

McEwen, L., Reeves, D., Brice, J., Meadley, F., Lewis, K., & Macdonald, N. (2013). Archiving memories of changing flood risk: Interdisciplinary explorations around knowledge for resilience. Journal of Arts and Communities, 2(5),

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jan 1, 2013
Journal Journal of Arts and Communities
Print ISSN 1757-1936
Publisher Intellect
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 2
Issue 5
Keywords archiving memories, resilience, flood risk
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/939485