Description of the project
An (An)Archive resists the archive’s claim to authority, coherence, and completion, holding instead the fragments, interruptions, and excesses that modern/colonial systems have rendered marginal or illegible. It allows memory to remain relational, embodied, and unfinished – carried through stories, affects, silences, and contradictions rather than extracted as data or evidence. In refusing linearity and closure, the (An)Archive becomes a practice of ethical attentiveness: a way of staying with plurality, honoring what exceeds categorization, and making space for other ways of knowing, remembering, and becoming amid the planetary polycrisis.
Worldbuilding is a speculative methodology that allows us to create shared worlds where multiple stories and futures can be explored, tested, and temporarily inhabited. By materializing speculative thought, worldbuilding invites us into a space where we can stretch what feels possible and imagine together otherwise. Rather than offering answers or solutions, it opens room for relational inquiry, experimentation, and care, making visible how worlds are made, sustained, and transformed. In this way, worldbuilding becomes a way of practicing plurality and staying with uncertainty while experimenting with futures that are not yet here.
Who are we?
(description of the LFCs, etc)
People?
People?
People?