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Joelle McTigue's work considers memory as unstable matter shaped by movement, repetition, access, power, and erasure. "The Archive Dreams Us: Where Light Remembers Wrongly, Seventeen Haiku" gathers passages that trace how archives filter the past through systems of digital storage, language, and algorithmic memory.
The poems move through three states: dataset, prompt, and memory, treating history not as a stable record but as something continually rewritten through selection, circulation, and omission. The work has appeared as a digital text installation in the Compost^ pavilion of The Wrong Biennale and also exists as a self-contained digital artifact. This publication carries the work into print.





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