https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444819888756
new media & society
2020, Vol. 22(12) 2200–2217
© The Author(s) 2019
Article reuse guidelines:
sagepub.com/journals-permissions
DOI: 10.1177/1461444819888756
journals.sagepub.com/home/nms
Blockchain archival discourse:
Trust and the imaginaries of
digital preservation
Angela Woodall
Columbia University, USA
Sharon Ringel
University of Haifa, Israel
Abstract
From its origins in virtual financial transactions, emerging initiatives are seeking to
acquire a new identity for blockchain as capable of addressing anxieties over the
capacity of digital media to permanently and accurately store information. In this
article, we explore the ensuing mediation between blockchain enterprises and new
professional communities to which they are catering. Drawing on thematic analysis,
we analyze how this process is being carried out through the discursive construction
of trust, leveraged rhetorically in academic, trade, and news publications to extend
an application for financial transactions to cultural institutions. We describe how
trust is used not only to mediate the introduction of an application that prioritizes
decentralization and cryptography, but is the turf on which traditional institutions
are staking a claim as the trustworthy managers of digital records through their use
of blockchain. The concept of the archival imaginary—a vision of what archives and
blockchain should be and mean that pivots on imagined needs and technological
capacities based on the current information ecology, institutional control, and
expert systems—offers a way to illuminate this process.
Keywords
Archives, blockchain, decentralization, discourse, socio-technical systems, trust
Corresponding author:
Angela Woodall, Department of Communications, Columbia Journalism School, Columbia University, 2950
Broadway, New York, NY 10027, USA.
Email: Angela.Woodall@columbia.edu
888756NMS 0 0 10.1177/1461444819888756new media & societyWoodall and Ringel
research-article 2019
Article