Counter-archiving and re-imagining of racialized collective futures
Conventional archives utilize temporality, spatialization, and racial privileging when exerting power and privilege over what is considered archivable. Syrus Marcus Ware explores “the erasure of racialized and indigenous histories from white trans archives, time lines, and cartographies of resistance” in his article “All Power to All People? Black LGBTTI2QQ Activism, Remembrance, and Archiving in Toronto” (p. 170). He discusses the importance of the documentary work done by folks within black queer and trans communities. The variety of skill sets and backgrounds used to approach this task ranges from artists and poets to activists and community mobilizers. Ware also notes that it is important to keep in mind that black queer subjects do not always or necessarily fit within the conceptualizations of white queer space and history and that there is an element of erasure when black histories are assumed to mimic white narratives. There is often a different timeline for racialized trans folks in terms of the typical white trans “progress narrative” because of differing access to the rights that are seemingly required to do so. Trans lives of colour in Westernized societies are more likely to be affected by multiple intersections of identity and systemic challenges that are inherent with racialization. The archives and histories of many queer and trans activists of colour are not fully accounted for in the same way as their white counterparts through conventional archiving practices as historical power dynamics shaped (and continue to shape) the ways people are literally fighting for physical safety and survival rather than having their activism documented.
Ware proposes that in beginning from and centering QTBIPOC (Queer, Trans, Black, Indigenous, Person of Colour) narratives, there is a new entry point and an interruption to the whitewashing of queer and trans historical accounts. This shift lends the ability to “[re]consider the past, presents, and futures” of racialized queer and trans communities, guiding prospective activism and offering meaningful ways of imagining collective futures. Who gets to tell histories shapes the futurity of marginalized communities, and especially racialized queer and trans narratives.
Ware, S. M. (2017). All Power to All People? TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly, 4(2), 170–180. https://doi.org/10.1215/23289252-3814961
















