New Issue: Journal of the International Association of Sound and Audiovisual Archives

Journal of the International Association of Sound and Audiovisual Archives no. 54 (2024)
(open access)

Editorial
Jennifer Vaughn

A Letter from IASA’s President
Patrick Midtlyng

Excavating Wartime Sound Heritage of Germany, Italy, and Japan
Captured Axis Sound Recordings in the Washington, D.C. Area and their Documentation
Carolyn Birdsall, Erica Harrison

The Revolution of Duplicated Music
Sonic Markers to Identify Early Phonograph Cylinder Copies in Archive Collections
Thomas Bårdsen

True Echoes
Researching wax cylinders recorded during the 1898 Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to the Torres Strait Islands
Grace Koch, Rebekah Hayes

Recent Issue: Archives and Records

Archives and Records, Vol. 45 no. 1, 2024
(partial open access)

Articles

Best practice in volunteer management in archives: analyzing two organizations
Inês M. Ferreira

Trusting the copies? Historical photographs and native title claims
Joanna Sassoon, Michael Aird & David Trigger

Defining ‘proper research’: privileged access, local authority archives and the academic researcher
Jessamy Carlson

Access to Public Archives in Europe: progress in the implementation of CoE Recommendation R (2000)13 on a European policy on access to archives
Michael Friedewald, Iván Székely & Murat Karaboga

Book Review

English archives, an historical survey
edited by Richard Olney, Liverpool, Liverpool University Press with the British Records Association, 2023
Maureen Jurkowski

Practical approaches to collections care
by Samantha Forsko, London, Routledge, 2023
Fiona Bourne

New/Recent Publications

Books

Chapron, Emmanuelle, and Fabienne Henryot, eds. Archives en bibliothèques, XVIe-XXIe siècles. Lyon: ENS Editions; Institut d’histoire du livre, 2023.

Drawing from the Archives: Comics Memory in the Contemporary Graphic Novel
Crucifix, Benoît
Cambridge University Press, 2023.

Scattered and Fugitive Things: How Black Collectors Created Archives and Remade History
Helton, Laura E.
Columbia University Press, 2023.

On Parchment: Animals, Archives, and the Making of Culture from Herodotus to the Digital Age
Holsinger, Bruce W.
Yale University Press, 2023.

Tactical Publishing: Using Senses, Software, and Archives in the Twenty-First Century
Ludovico, Alessandro
MIT Press, 2023.

Spoils of Knowledge: Seventeenth-Century Plunder in Swedish Archives and Libraries
Molin, Emma Hagström
Brill, 2023.

Digital Humanities in the Library, Second Edition
Arianne Hartsell-Gundy Laura Braunstein Liorah Golomb
ACRL, 2024

Journalism History and Digital Archives
Edited By Henrik Bødker
Routledge, 2021

The Specter and the Speculative: Afterlives and Archives in the African Diaspora
Edited by Mae G. Henderson, Jeanne Scheper and Gene Melton II
Rutgers University Press, 2024

The Pre-Modern Manuscript Trade and its Consequences, ca. 1890–1945
Edited by Laura Cleaver, Danielle Magnusson, Hannah Morcos and Angéline Rais
ARC Humanities Press, 2024

Self-Determined First Nations Museums and Colonial Contestation: The Keeping Place
Robert Hudson, Shannon Woodcock
Routledge, 2022

Welcoming Museum Visitors with Unapparent Disabilities
Beth Redmond-Jones, ed.
Rowman & Littlefield, 2024

Materialities in Dance and Performance: Writing, Documenting, Archiving
Gabriele Klein / Franz Anton Cramer (eds.)
transcript, 2024

Global Voices from the Women’s Library at the World’s Columbian Exposition
Feminisms, Transnationalism and the Archive

Marija Dalbello, Sarah Wadsworth, eds.
Palgrave Macmillan, 2023

Illustration and Heritage
Rachel Emily Taylor
Bloomsbury, 2024

Articles

Jatowt, A., Sato, M., Draxl, S. et al. Is this news article still relevant? Ranking by contemporary relevance in archival search. Int J Digit Libr 25, 197–216 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00799-023-00377-y

Garg, K., Jayanetti, H.R., Alam, S. et al. Challenges in replaying archived Twitter pages. Int J Digit Libr 25, 217–236 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00799-023-00379-w

Alenka Kavčič Čolić, Andreja Hari. “Improving accessibility of digitization outputs: EODOPEN project research findings.” Digital Library Perspectives 40, no. 2 (2024)

Podcasts

Archives in Context: Season 8, Episode 3: Maryna Paliienko

Recent Issue: Journal of the History of Collections

Volume 36, Issue 1, March 2024
(partial open access)

The art collections and museum of King William II of the Netherlands (1792–1849)
Ellinoor Bergvelt

Lucanian heritage across the world: the Spanish collections
Alain Duplouy and Mariana Silva Porto

Acquisition, duplicates and exchange: C. P. de Bosset’s collections from Cephalonia, Ithaca and Delphi in the British Museum
Amelia Dowler

Continuity and change in the British diplomatic service in the Levant: The ‘Levantine’ question and the lure of antiquities
Lucia Patrizio Gunning and Despina Vlami

Garden catalogues as sources for studying the collection and transmission of plants: Madeiran plants in the Ajuda botanical garden as a case-study
Sandra Mesquita and others

Creating the Bowes Museum: Collectors, dealers and auctions in mid-nineteenth-century Paris
Simon Spier

Collecting copper alloy portrait heads: A history of the acquisition and export of the Wúnmọníjẹ̀ heads in late colonial Nigeria
Tomos Llywelyn Evans

Reading between the lines: The Alba collection after the end of entailment (nineteenth and twentieth centuries)
Whitney Dennis

Andrew Carnegie’s museum of evolution
Diana Strazdes

Collecting antiquities in wartime: The First World War Antiquities (Queensland) Project
James Donaldson and others

Twentieth-century private collecting: Dr Philip Nelson’s acquisition of sculptures from the Kinnaird collection at Rossie Priory
Georgina Muskett

Rediscovering John Martin: Collecting the apocalypse in post-war Britain
Laia Anguix-Vilches

Book Reviews

Collective Wisdom: Collecting in the early modern academy
Paula Findlen

Dai Medici ai Rothschild: mecenati, collezionisti, filantropi
Jörg Zutter

Ulisse Aldrovandi: Naturalist and collector
Henrietta McBurney

Sarcophagi and other Reliefs, 4 vols., Part A.III of The Paper Museum of Cassiano dal Pozzo: A catalogue raisonné
Arnold Nesselrath

The Temple of Fame & Friendship: Portraits, music, and history in the C.P.E. Bach circle
Naomi J Barker

A Collection in Context: kommentierte Edition der Briefe und Dokumente Sammlung Dr. Karl von Schäffer
Jonathan Kagan

Wilhelm Bode and the Art Market: Connoisseurship, networking and control of the marketplace
Alan Crookham

Ancient Art and its Commerce in Early Twentieth-Century Europe: The John Marshall Archive. A collection of essays written by the participants of the John Marshall Archive Project
Lynn Catterson

The Circulating Lifeblood of Ideas: Leo Steinberg’s library of prints
Armin Kunz

Recent Issue: ESARBICA

ESARBICA Journal: Journal of the Eastern and Southern Africa Regional Branch of the International Council on Archives / Vol. 42 (2023) 
(open access)

Editorial
Nampombe Saurombe, Makutla Mojapelo

Digital records curation education in Zambia
Abel M’kulama, Akakandelwa Akakandela, Tuesday Bwalya, Sitali Wamundila, Chrispin Hamooya

Ingesting digital records into an archival system
conceptual framework within a South African perspective
Lorette Jacobs, Thulisile Lemekoana

Exploration of education and training of records and archives management staff in the public sector organisations of Lusaka, Zambia
Chembe Kaluba, Thelma Siame Kapapa

Internet of Things for archival ease of access to users in the Fifth Industrial Revolution
Mashilo Modiba, Ngoako Solomon Marutha

Safeguarding plantation records of Malawi
Innocent Mankhwala

Archives as evidence for land restitution process in South Africa
Lyborn Mabapa

Navigating the digital era: challenges and solutions for archival professional in education and training
Tolulope Balogun

Disaster preparedness for records management at the Workers’ Compensation Fund, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
Praygod Ng’unda, Esther Ndenje-Sichalwe

Impact of COVID-19 on access to the National Archives of Zimbabwe
post-pandemic accessibility and future operations
Samuel Chabikwa, Patrick Ngulube

Digitisation of claims records at the Road Accident Fund in South Africa
Vanessa Neo Mathope

Moving with times
The inclusion of Fourth Industrial Revolution Technologies in the curriculum of Library and Information Science Schools in Botswana and South Africa
Olefhile Mosweu, Sidney Netshakhuma

Unearthing archival climate change baseline data in southern and eastern Africa
Graham Dominy

CFP: Markers: Annual Journal of the Association for Gravestone Studies

Call for article submissions for the 2026 issue of Markers, the scholarly journal of the Association for Gravestone Studies. The deadline is November 1, 2024.

The subject matter of Markers is defined as the analytical study of gravemarkers, monuments, tombs, and cemeteries of all types and encompassing all historical periods and geographical regions. Markers is of interest to scholars in public history, anthropology, historical archaeology, art and architectural history, ethnic studies, material culture studies, historic preservation, American studies, folklore and popular culture studies, linguistics, literature, rhetoric, local and regional history, cultural geography, sociology, and related fields. Articles submitted for publication in Markers should be scholarly, analytical, and interpretive, not merely descriptive or entertaining, and should be written in a style appropriate to both a wide academic audience and an audience of interested non-academics.

Questions and submissions to Markers should be sent to Editor Elisabeth Roark, Professor of Art History and Museum Studies at Chatham University, at roark@chatham.edu.  To learn more about the Association for Gravestone Studies, please visit our website at https://www.gravestonestudies.org/.

Contact Information

Dr. Elisabeth Roark, Editor, Professor of Art History and Museum Studies, Chatham University

Contact Email

roark@chatham.edu

URL

https://www.gravestonestudies.org/agspublications/markers

New Issue: Archival Science

Archival Science Volume 24, Issue 2
June 2024
Special Issue: Dignity by Design: Pathways to Participatory Recordkeeping Systems
Issue Editors: Elliot Freeman, Violet Hamence-Davies, Joanne Evans
(partial open access)

Dignity by design: pathways to participatory recordkeeping systems
Elliot Freeman, Violet Hamence-Davies, Joanne Evans

Returning love to Ancestors captured in the archives: Indigenous wellbeing, sovereignty and archival sovereignty
Kirsten Thorpe

Beyond access: (re)designing archival guides for changing landscapes
Mike Jones, Rebe Taylor

Archival dignity, colonial records and community narratives
Jeannette A. Bastian, Stanley H. Griffin

Caring records: professional insights into child-centered case note recording
Martine HawkesJoanne EvansBarbara Reed

The need for a participatory recordkeeping system for children and young people placed in residential care homes: the case of Sweden
Proscovia Svard, Sheila Zimic

Designing recordkeeping systems for transitional justice and peace: ‘on the ground’ experiences and practices relating to organizations supporting conflict-affected peoples
Victoria Lemieux, Amber Gallant, Niloufar Vahid-Massoudi

The perpetual twilight of records: consentful recordkeeping as moral defence
Gregory Rolan, Antonina Lewis

New Issue: American Archivist

American Archivist 87.1 (Spring/Summer 2024)
Table of Contents

(Review access here)

From the Editor

Presidential Address

Theodore Calvin Pease Award Essay

Articles

Perspectives

Reviews

Reissued Call for Artists, Writers, and Academics: “Creative Responses to Holocaust Materialities” – A special issue of Holocaust Studies: A Journal of Culture and History

Holocaust Studies has given the editors permission to include creative work for the first time in the journal. 

In this special issue, we aim to further examine the ‘material turn’ of Holocaust studies through the lens of creative practices, which remains an understudied area of this movement. As Marianne Hirsch (2019) notes: “Commemorative artistic practices can themselves function as the connective tissue between divergent but related histories of violence and their transmission across generations. The arts offer a fruitful platform to practise the openness and responsiveness that allow such connections to emerge for the postgenerations”. Our scope includes contemporaneous and non-contemporaneous artistic, cultural, and literary works, established by those with and without a direct connection to this history. We are particularly keen to include contributions from creative writers and artists experimenting with and reflecting critically on their own creative processes, working, for instance, with line, genre, textiles, objects, images, or sound as an ephemeral artefact; and from critics showing how survivors or their descendants have represented the Holocaust through these materialities. One theme might be re-purposing, repackaging or even ‘recycling’ of materials: a material intended for one purpose which has been used or examined for other ends. Another concern might be the role of creativity in the phenomenology of viewing and interpreting historical materialities, or of creativity in the  effort to recover, or reconstruct, lost or stolen objects. A perennial concern is the researcher-artist’s role in relation to the archive.

Abstracts should be no more than 300 words, with a short biography (150 words max). Please send your proposals (or any questions) via email to: holocaustmaterialities@gmail.com by 1st September 2024 (extended submission date). We expect final submission of the journal issue to be in 2025.

If you are submitting creative work, please specify in your abstract how many images and approximate word count for any creative writing you expect to include as part of your final submission .

Normal word count for the journal’s critical essay submissions is 8-12k. For creative work, your final submission should include at least 2K words of critical reflection on your creative practice/contextual information. For the creative element, there is no minimum word count; however, the 12k word limit remains. 

The following approximate guidelines might be useful: 1 image = 250-500 words. 50 lines of poetry = 1,000 words.

Contact Information

Hannah Wilson and Jay Prosser

Contact Email

holocaustmaterialities@gmail.com

CFP: THE MOVING IMAGE – Call for Special Issue 26.1 “Accessibility in moving image archives”

In July of 1990, the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) was signed. The intention of the act was to prohibit discrimination based on disability status. This special issue of The Moving Image is situated around the theme of archival accessibility to coincide with the 35th anniversary of the signing of the ADA. Even 35 years later, representation of people with disabilities in moving image archives is low both in the literature and in employment. The goal of this special issue is to reflect on the relationship between disability and moving image archives. How is disability represented in moving image collections? Where has there been growth? What inclusion efforts still need to be made to create accessible moving image archives for users and archivists?

Themes include (but are not limited to):

  • Accessibility barriers in moving image archival education and training
  • Disability representation in community archives vs institutional archives
  • Accessible collections for users
  • Disability representation in collections material
  • (In)accessible archival spaces and universal design
  • Equitable hiring practises
  • Web accessibility
  • Accessible programming and curation
  • Health hazards in moving image archives
  • Archival accessibility “post-Pandemic” and the growth of remote work
  • Moving image archives and mental health
  • Ableism in moving image archives

Note: There is a particular interest in articles written from the perspective of those with lived experience of disability, chronic illness, and/or neurodiversity. 

Types of Submissions:

  • Feature articles: Double-blind peer reviewed research papers, 4,000 – 6,000 words
  • Forum pieces: Shorter, less formal pieces, including interviews and “notes from the field” discussing case studies on single institutions or archivists’ own work, such as specific projects or policy initiatives, 2,000 – 3,000 words
  • Reviews: reviews of recent books, media (e.g., DVDs, Blu-Rays), conferences, film festivals, and exhibitions, 700 – 1,000 words

Submission guidelines

 Please send initial proposals and final submissions to special issue editor Michael Marlatt (marlattm@yorku.ca) and CCjournal editor Devin Orgeron at editor@themovingimage.org.

Proposals are due by October 31, 2024, and should include: (1) a 250-word abstract, (2) four key words, (3) a 100-word bio of the author(s), (4) the type of paper you would like to write (e.g. feature article). Proposal review will be completed by mid-November 2024.

Completed manuscripts will be due for editorial review by May 31, 2025. All manuscripts should be submitted as a Microsoft Word email attachment, double-spaced throughout, using 12-point type with 1-inch margins, following the 17th edition of the Chicago Manual of Style.

Contact Information

Special issue editor Michael Marlatt can be reached for questions and feedback at marlattm@yorku.ca

Contact Information

Michael Marlatt 

Contact Email

marlattm@yorku.ca

URL

THE MOVING IMAGE – Call for Special Issue 26.1 “Accessibility in moving image archives”