Abstract

ABSTRACT This article’s thesis expands archival thought and practice to include the built environment, by exploring archival and other theory and practice and illustrating the premise with Dalkeith Palace. Incorporating a multidisciplinary view, we understand the built environment as a form of living archive that expands the notion of records and the meaning of private and semi-private record creation and keeping. The incorporation of traces, symbols and alternative voices as archival sources encourages equity and inclusion in the built environment and in the field of archives.

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