However, I also made it clear that this work mattered to me: as a queer person of color who grew up in a place where I was shielded from a lot of my Mexican culture, I have always been seeking the art and stories of people who experience barriers to accessing their heritage through materials. I have always been a curious lifelong learner, and feel as though the most enriching, inspiring learning experiences I had were done outside of theory-heavy lecture halls.
I’m currently writing my thesis, and came across a podcast about an institution I want to highlight, Appalshop in Whitesburg, Kentucky. The speaker noted that he had grown up not being taught about local music and culture, and hearing from the world via harmful stereotypes that people in Appalachia are worthless and unimportant. When he started interacting with Appalshop’s archival materials and creating films for them, he came to know and appreciate that culture and understand that he was a contributing member to that ongoing legacy. One quote resonates with me still: “A community becomes dangerous when they understand their culture. 'Cause then you have something to fight for.” Not getting a seat at the proverbial table for so long makes a lot of people give up the fight and leads to identity challenges or confusions about oneself within their culture, feelings that don’t just disappear in a generation. Arab.AMP is making its own table, expressing themselves through captivating, provocative experimental art and preserving that art and culture in a time where so much is under threat. At the AMP Archives, we are growing our digital archival database of programming that reaches back to 2017, containing videos, flyers, and photos. This AMP.Archive Tales is intended to have the archive speak aloud, as we see recurring themes, catch up with past artists, and connect to what is going on around us now. Arab.AMP remains a platform for future-looking experimental art from members of the SWANA diaspora and allied communities, but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t consider how that media can be seen in perpetuity. One striking thing in one of my first conversations with Leyya was her desire to save the Arab.AMP collection “so that it doesn’t go away.” I’m inspired by seeing each addition to Arab.AMP’s platform, and I can’t wait to check in here to tell you about my observations, trajectories, and archive-related advice.
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AMP.Archive TALES
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