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Journal of Material Culture, Vol. 11, No. 3, 318-338 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/1359183506068808

Observed Decay: Telling Stories with Mutable Things

Caitlin DeSilvey

Open University, UK

The degradation of cultural artefacts is usually understood in a purely negative vein: the erosion of physical integrity is associated with a parallel loss of cultural information. This article asks if it is possible to adopt an interpretive approach in which entropic processes of decomposition and decay, though implicated in the destruction of cultural memory traces on one register, contribute to the recovery of memory on another register. The article tracks the entanglement of cultural and natural histories through the residual material culture of a derelict homestead in Montana. In conclusion, the article suggests that deposits of degraded material, though inappropriate for recovery in conventional conservation strategies, may be understood through the application of a collaborative interpretive ethic, allowing other-than-human agencies to participate in the telling of stories about particular places.

Key Words: entropy • heritage • memory • Montana • waste


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