New Journal: KULA

I saw this announcement on the A&A listserv a couple weeks ago. I’m curious how the content will shape up and how much will be archives-related. There’s definite potential and I hope archivists consider contributing.

Inaugural Call for Papers – Spring 2016

KULA: Knowledge Creation, Dissemination, and Preservation Studies is a new peer-reviewed, open access journal, meant to encourage the formation of a multi-disciplinary community of scholars studying human knowledge processes through the ages, concerned to understand their role in the full sweep of human civilizations, and to project them into the future from both humanistic and technological perspectives. KULA has no author publication charges and articles will be published on a continuous basis.

KULA derives its name from the Sanskrit word meaning “community.” Kula is also a reference to the Pacific Rim Terrane called the “Kula Plate” from which Vancouver Island, Canada was formed millions of years ago and is where KULA is based at the University Libraries of the University of Victoria.

KULA will publish articles related to the past, present, and future of Citizen Science; Cultural Heritage; Cultural Heritage Informatics; Culture of Researchers; Data Sharing; Digital Archaeology; Digital Asset Management; Digital Curation; Digital Humanities; Digital Infrastructure; Digital Libraries; Digital Methods; Digital Preservation/ Curation; Digital Repositories; Digital Scholarship; Digitization; Emulation; Humanities Computing; Inclusive Design; Information Systems; Institutional and Policy Design; Knowledge & Research Infrastructures; Knowledge for Development; Knowledge Infrastructure; Knowledge Representation and Reasoning; Linked Data; Literary Studies; Media Studies; Multi-Institutional Collaboration; Open Access; Open Access Publishing; Open Scholarship; Open Science; Open Social Scholarship; Peer-Review Systems; Professionalization; Publishing Technologies; Research Assessment; Research Data Management; Research Libraries; Scholarly Communication; Scholarly Editing; Search and Discovery; Semantic Extraction; Social Exclusion; Social Knowledge; Sustainability Models; System Analysis and Design.

New Articles: Routledge Information Technology Journals

The list of journals I maintain contains ones where the primary focus is archives. I’m not sure how to keep up with other journals that sometimes publish archives-related content, but I’ll post it when I see it. A Routledge email newsletter announced several open access research articles.

They are all information technology articles, and some may only be peripherally relevant to archives. I saw two archives-specific articles: “Archival Appraisal and the Digital Record: Applying Past Tradition for Future Practice” and “A Digital Archive of Cultural Heritage Objects: Standardized Metadata and Annotation Categories.”

It’s great to see archives content in other journals, and I hope to see more!

Call for Volunteer: AA Reviews Portal

from the SAA website:

WANTED: Coordinator of The American Archivist Reviews Portal

Do you have more than a passing familiarity with the latest archives and information management technology? The Society of American Archivists invites applications for the position of Coordinator of The American Archivist Reviews Portal. The portal includes information about professional products and services, and the reviews complement and expand on content published in the reviews section of The American Archivist. This is a volunteer position and works directly under the supervision of the Reviews Editor. For more information and to apply, click here. Deadline: July 1.

New Article: Journal of Western Archives

The Journal of Western Archives is pleased to announce the availability of a new archival by Cyndi Shein and Emily Lapworth entitled “Say Yes to Digital Surrogates: Strengthening the Archival Record in the Postcustodial Era.” It is well worth reading. You can check it out at http://digitalcommons.usu.edu/westernarchives/vol7/iss1/9/.

Gordon Daines

_________________________
J. Gordon Daines III
Editor, Journal of Western Archives
Supervisor of Reference Services
Department Chair
L. Tom Perry Special Collections
Brigham Young University
Provo, UT 84602
801-422-5821
gordon_daines@byu.edu

New Issue: African Journal of Library, Archives and Information Science

abstracts available:

Vol 26, No 1 (2016)

Table of Contents

Articles

Novel and Fundamental Advances in Digital Technologies for Managing Information and Knowledge
Stephen Mutula

Visibility of University of Zululand and Moi University Researchers in Web of Science and Scopus from 2003 to 2013
Dennis N. Ocholla, Janneke Mostert, Daniel C. Rotich

Research Support and Open Access: Notes from Nigeria
Noah Oluwafemi Samuel

Integrated Library System Implementation: The Bowen University Library Experience with Koha Software
Ayoku A. Ojedokun, Grace O.O. Olla, Samuel A. AdigunComputer Anxiety and Computer

Self-Efficacy in Computer-Based Tests in Selected Universities in South-West Nigeria
Williams Nwagwu, Olukunle Adebayo

An Evaluation of a Donor Funded Information and Communication Technology Centre in a South Africa Indigenous Community: Reflections on the Bhamshela Telecentre
Ken Chisa, Ruth Hoskins

User Perceptions about Archives at the Lutheran Theological Institute Library, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
Francis Garaba

A Comparative Analysis of Library and Information Science Master’s Degree Programmes in Uganda and USA
Dianah Twinoburyo Kacunguzi

New Article: JCAS

(from Facebook post)

We are pleased to announce publication of a new article: “The Wild West No More: Preserving 40 Years of Electronic Records at the University of Wyoming American Heritage Center,” by Tyler G. Cline.

In the summer of 2014, the American Heritage Center undertook a project to migrate all born-digital records to a secure server, thereby creating the means to provide access to the material. The author explores the project which largely eliminating the backlog of born-digital collection material and making those records available for use to all.

New Issue: Comma

[note: articles available through membership or subscription. abstracts of articles are available.]

Comma Volume: 2015, Number: 1 (May 2016) is now available online.

Comma, International Journal on Archives is the chief serial publication of the International Council on Archives. Comma strives to be of value to a broader readership beyond the ICA membership and the archival profession at large. You can keep up to date with the journal by clicking here to sign up to new issue alerts, and can learn more about the title at its website page here.

Contents

Introduction

La maltraitance archivistique : élément du dysfonctionnement de l’administration et de l’État. Le cas du Bénin
Alphonse Labitan

Le service éducatif des Archives nationales du Bénin au service de l’enseignant et de l’apprenant
Léontine Hounnou Aballo

De l’expérience de collecte d’archives privées au Burkina Faso
Hamidou Diallo

La situation des archives au Burundi, des origines à nos jours
Nicodème Nyandwi

L’environnement des archives au Cameroun
Michael Ngwanyi

Exhumer les vestiges de la colonisation. Les archives coloniales belges et leur histoire
Bérengère Piret

Les Archives de l’Afrique Équatoriale Française
Brice Isinove Owabira

État Civil et archives en Côte d’Ivoire
Venance Bahi Gouro

Les archives publiques au Gabon de la fin de la période coloniale à nos jours
Jérôme Angoune Nzoghe

L’évolution de la fonction Archives au Niger
Habou Boukari

De « l’Exception sénégalaise » à la « Mémoire partagée »
Fatoumata Cissé Diarra

Les Archives nationales du Sénégal d’hier à aujourd’hui : problématique de la conservation
Ndéye Marème Diallo

L’expérience des services régionaux d’archives au Sénégal après trente ans d’existence
Mohamed Lamine Kane

Un autre regard sur les archives en Afrique
Jean-Pierre Delva

Abstracts

Contacts des auteurs Authors’ contact details

Editorial Board Comité de rédaction

Copyright 2016 Liverpool University Press. All Rights Reserved.

ACRL’s RBM Now Open Access

From Library Journal‘s Info Docket:

ACRL’s “RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cultural Heritage” Becomes an Open Access Publication

ACRL announces that its special collections and cultural heritage-focused journal RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cultural Heritage became an open access publication beginning with its Spring 2016 30th anniversary issue.

Read the full article.

New Catalog from Rowman & Littlefield

As I noted last week, I am trying to keep up to date more with book releases. Rowman & Littlefield released a new catalog. The bulk of the books are for museums, but there’s some archives in there as well. Note that it’s not all new books, but some new and others released within the past couple of years. Happy browsing!

How I Write

I have several posts that address writing. The most important point is to write, write, write. So how to write? There is, of course, no one answer. Everyone has different methods, discipline, style, etc. Each person must decide what works best for him/her.

Writing is a process. One needs to figure out what process works best for him/her. MIT has a good outline of the process, as does the Purdue OWL, and here’s a fun little video. The process is difficult, time-consuming, and challenging. But it’s also rewarding, confidence-building, and achievable.

My process, if it can be called that, is to write in a scattered way. Meaning, I’ll spend some time writing about reference interviews, the next day perhaps I’ll write about ethics, then the next day I’ll write about research methods. There isn’t necessarily a rhyme or reason, but that works for me. Some authors succeed at writing in a linear fashion, but I learned a long time ago that does not work for me and only causes stress and angst. I succeed more at jumping around to different topics.

Part of why this happens is that I’ll be reading a book about all aspects of reference and I want to make notes in different sections and chapters of my book. I’ll jump around so I don’t lose or forget those thoughts. It’s more important for me to get ideas and thoughts down, even if they are a bit jumbled, so that I can go back and revise it into coherence.

One hurdle I overcame while writing my dissertation was to not attempt perfect writing (see above resources). At first, I got stuck on trying to make a sentence perfect and I spent too much time on that sentence/paragraph that I lost thoughts and ideas. Most of the writing process is actually editing and revising, so struggling at the beginning to be perfect causes frustration and stress. The more one writes, the better it will become over time. There are many variations of the quote “There’s no such thing as good writing, only good rewriting.” Plus, an editor will always change, edit, suggest, and revise.

To someone else reading it, my writing appears very jumbled. Sometimes I write full sentences, but I also write thoughts, ideas, questions, notes, and quotes. When reading, I’ll find a good quote, copy and cite it. Later, I’ll decide which quotes are appropriate in full, which can be combined, which can be deleted, which should be a footnote mention only, and which I’ll revise into my own words (keeping proper citations, of course).

Much of my early drafts are notes: include this idea, don’t forget to talk about that, brief outlines, asking myself questions, and lists of topics. It’s more important to me to get those thoughts down than to flush out every idea. I find it much easier to write through revision than try to achieve complete and coherent writing at the beginning.

Other times, I’ll just write. One tip I learned while writing my dissertation was to cover my monitor so I couldn’t see my spelling and grammatical mistakes. I did this in 15 minute chunks over many days. This was a great help to get me started and to just get the ideas written. Over time, I no longer cover my monitor but I still use that tactic. It’s gratifying to do this because I see the page numbers continue to increase, which makes me more motivated to continue.

I can’t emphasize enough to dispel the idea of writing perfectly. Just Google “there’s no such thing as perfect writing” and you will see that every author abides by it. Overcoming that obstacle takes time, but is most liberating. So go forth and write!