Want to preserve your emails for posterity?

I read in smh this morn­ing that The Powerhouse Museum is cre­at­ing Australia’s first pub­lic email archive in an attempt to pre­serve a col­lec­tion of present day com­mu­ni­ca­tions for future generations.

Anyone can con­tribute by going to the Email Australia site and sub­mit­ting emails which are funny, sad, embarass­ing etc etc.

Having just made the change to a new lap­top, and whimped out on this oppor­tu­nity to declare true email bank­ruptcy, preser­va­tion of email is on my mind. Of course, I under­stand the need to pre­serve busi­ness com­mu­ni­ca­tions, but dearer to my heart, and harder to let go, is all the ephemera I store in a folder sim­ply called “People”. It’s rare (though not unknown) for me to to sit there and flick through all the funny, sad, embarass­ing emails my friends have sent me over the years. But still, just like that box of old let­ters at the back of my wardrobe, I can­not embrace the light­ness of let­ting it go.

And then, I won­der, if this archive was to be pre­served in some way, what will it tell of my milieu? An exam­ple, exple­tives deleted:

Hi love,

… only just got around to watch­ing the barnsey clip… *&^%… he was hot.

Trust you’re busy wif the con­fer­ence loom­ing & all… shall we get together for a cold one once it’s all over?

b x.

With that in mind, get along to Email Australia and make your con­tri­bu­tion to our online cul­tural heritage.

One response to “Want to preserve your emails for posterity?”:

    • By:Josh Sharp
    • April 4th, 2008

    Alan Jones has an inter­est­ing post on this (and I think I agree with him):

    Your tax dol­lars at work pro­mot­ing Hotmail

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