Imaginative Archives for a More Radical Nursing Future
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.25071/2291-5796.187Keywords:
prefigurative praxis, radical narrative, nursing is political, imaginative archivesAbstract
In this article, coauthors advance nonlinear threads weaving together questions and contemplations from conference presentations in 2024 and 2025 that were collectively imagined and brought to life by members of an openly political, international writing collective known as Compost Collaborative. The ontological and philosophical underpinnings of our ideas draw from critical theory and philosophy, and the writings of anarchist, feminist, abolitionist, and labor leaders. As a collaborative of nurses, artists and activists, we endeavor to make political ideas more visible and viable in nursing, to advance political nursing action for solidarity in caring, amidst living and dying together on a dying planet. And in tandem, we desire the nursing archives to vibrate with the stories and material objects of nurses who are currently leading, uplifting, and accompanying resistance and justice movements around the planet. We draw upon historical examples from nursing labor movements in Canada, and the archived, dramatized, and reimagined story of Emma Goldman who used prefigurative praxis to nurse comrades and communities as a private and public health nurse, while leading an anarchist movement for justice for impoverished immigrants, workers, women and children. We imagine a political and speculative history of nursing that could have been / may have been, silenced, erased, untold, while asking whose stories tell stories? What are the stories that nursing is writing and living currently that will (or will not) become the archives of the future? We briefly explore the consequences of telling the untold stories. We seek to engage nursing history critically and politically because it is an intentional action, a gerund from the verb- nursING as an action to “creatively disorder the institutional fictions” (Hartman, 2021).
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