New Issue: Collections: A Journal for Museum and Archives Professionals

Volume 19 Issue 2, June 2023
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Articles

Focus Issue: Safety and Cultural Heritage Summit: A Review of Hazard Identification and Risk Mitigation 2016–2021
Catharine Hawks, Tara D. Kennedy, Kathryn Makos, Anne Marigza, Melissa Miller, Samantha Snell

Navigating Change and Safety with Mercury in an Installation
Rebecca Horn, Emily Hamilton, Jeff Sotek, Steve Poletski

Not a Known Carcinogen: Health and Safety Considerations of New and Innovative Treatments
Kerith Koss Schrager, Anne Kingery-Schwartz, Julie Sobelman

Can’t Touch That: Safety, Preservation, and Collection Management Assessments of an Education Collection
Kelsey Falquero, Catharine Hawks, Deborah Hull-Walski, Kathryn Makos, Lisa Palmer

Managing Mental Health in Cultural Heritage Emergency Response: Occupational Safety and Operational Resilience
Rebecca Kennedy, Nora Lockshin

Toxic Tomes: Understanding the Use and Risks of Heavy Metals in Nineteenth-Century Bookcloth
Melissa Tedone, Rosie Grayburn

A Safer Work Environment for Stabilization of Moldy Collections
Amber L. Tarnowski

Protocols to Prevent Transmission of the Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome: Three Case Studies
Jo Anne Martinez-Kilgore

Powder Struggle: How a Contaminated Rare Book Collection Led to a New Paradigm of Collaboration at Harvard
John Avedian, Brenda Bernier

Case Study

Comprehensive Occupational and Environmental Risk Assessment of Elemental Mercury at the Edison National Historic Site in West Orange, NJ
Bernard L. Fontaine, Jr.

CFP for a special issue of Holocaust Studies: A Journal of Culture and History on ‘Personal documents and ephemera as sources for interdisciplinary Holocaust scholarship’

Personal documents and ephemera as sources for interdisciplinary Holocaust scholarship

Edited by Hannah Holtschneider (University of Edinburgh) and Amy Simon (Michigan State University)

Since the 1970s, and proliferating in the 1980s, works of life-writing and of academic scholarship have sought to reconstruct the experience of individuals during persecution, and as refugees in different parts of the world. In the past decade micro-historical research has drawn increasingly on personal documents from the Holocaust. Branching out from works on Holocaust testimony and memoirs, literary scholars have engaged with diaries, letters and other ego-documents, and sociologists, linguists and ethnographers have shown interest in personal archives of families affected by the Holocaust. At the same time, the past two decades have seen a rise in publications of memoirs and other forms of life writing that engages specifically with such sources. Typically, such works proceed from one disciplinary perspective and rarely engage with scholarship working on similar sources but with a different scholarly method. Yet, a conversation of scholars in different disciplines working on the same documentary evidence is still lacking. Volumes such as The Diary: The Epic of Everyday Life models a different approach by bringing together literary and cultural scholars with historians in the exploration of diary writing.

The proposed special issue seeks to facilitate a similar conversation and bring together scholarship on personal documents from the Holocaust. The aim is to develop and test multi- and interdisciplinary work regarding the value of different ways of approaching and interrogating these sources. We expect historians, literary scholars, linguists and translation scholars, historical anthropologists and sociologists among others to contribute to this special issue. We also encourage those working on documents from hitherto unexplored archival collections of Jewish refugees to majority-world locations, to propose contributions.

To this end we are inviting proposals for research articles of 7,000-12,000 words (incl. references and bibliography), annotated translations and research notes. We expect to host two gatherings during the writing process to engage in productive conversation about the  links between topics and cross-disciplinary approaches. The finished articles should act both as stand-alone research papers and model a methodological conversation across the entire special issue suggesting new directions for research in this field.  

Possible themes engaging personal documents and ephemera from the Holocaust could include, but are by no means limited to:

  • Multiple approaches to the same sources to explore gains of multidisciplinary research and opportunities for interdisciplinary work
  • The role of emotions for writing about personal archives
  • The relevance of materiality
  • Space and place in personal documents
  • Gender as an analytical category
  • Connecting micro- with macro-history
  • Language, translation and genre 
  • The value of engaging one collection of documents or a single diary
  • The value of working across a number of collections or different sources
  • Ethical considerations of writing about the lives of ‘private’ individuals 
  • Sociological, anthropological, historical, literary theory arising from engagement with personal documents

​​​​Timeline:

  • 300 word proposal with 100 word bio by 31 August 2023. Please send this to h.holtschneider@ed.ac.uk and simonamy@msu.edu.
  • Notification to submit full article by 30 September 2023.
  • Publication is envisaged by the end of 2025.

Contact Info: 

Dr Hannah Holtschneider, University of Edinburgh, UK

Contact Email: h.holtschneider@ed.ac.uk

URL: https://www.ed.ac.uk/profile/hannah-holtschneider

CFP: The Image on the Page: A Study Day Around Illustrated Print Culture 

Concordia University Library, Montréal (Québec), Canada, 13 October 2023 (in-person) 

This study day aims to gather researchers around the subject of the printed image since the 1880s. A significant milestone of this era was the widespread implementation of halftone printing, a photomechanical process that eventually enabled the reproduction of subtle hues and gradients in publications with large-scale print runs. 

With particular attention to material bibliography and production techniques, we seek to better understand how illustrations contribute to the formation of meaning and discourses within different contexts from illustrated newspapers to etiquette manuals, from scientific journals to children’s books. As literacy levels continued to rise throughout the twentieth century, this vast array of publications was directed at increasingly diverse communities of readers whose expectations and needs influenced the development of visual culture in print. In turn, the intimate relationships that played out between image and text significantly shaped people’s impressions of the world around them by collating all manner of leisurely, professional, and political information within the space of the page. 

Straddling the disciplines of literary studies, art history, bibliography, and library sciences, the field of illustrated print culture is a privileged inroad to social history. We are inspired by the foundational work of Richard Benson’s The Printed Picture (MoMA, 2008) as well as recent scholarly interest in vernacular media, such as Sarah Mirseyedi and Gerry Beegan’s important contributions on the development of photomechanical reproduction and the Thierry Gervais-edited volume The “Public” Life of Photographs (The MIT Press, 2016). Heeding the call of rare books specialist Roger Gaskell, who has identified the need to develop a “bibliography of images,” we invite contributions in French and English that address any aspect of mass-produced visual materials as well as the diverse industrial or manual processes that enabled their production. 

Proposals may consider topics such as: 

  • The development, usage, or impact of various print processes. 
  • The importance of the graphic arts, including layout and typography, in the study of visual culture. 
  • The historical significance of a given book, magazine, or other kind of illustrated publication. 
  • Mass-produced works that rely on printed pictorial sequences such as photobooks, comic strips, or photo-novels. 
  • Posters, flyers, postcards and other kinds of ephemera. 
  • The invisible intermediaries: designers, prepress specialists, printers, typographers, etc. 
  • The evolving roles and statuses of author and illustrator/artist. 
  • Readership and reception. 
  • Distribution and publishing networks. 
  • The study of variants in the context of printed pictorial material: seriality, different editions, and the (ir)relevance of the original image. 
  • Approaches to the rapport between text and image in print and their resultant meaning. 
  • The creation and mass-circulation of stereotypes or other visual tropes. 
  • Theoretical or methodological approaches to multimedia artefacts: how to categorize, characterize and interpret hybrid print objects. 
  • The institutional challenges faced by scholars, libraries, and archives alike in collecting, cataloguing, preserving, and making illustrated print culture accessible. 

Proposals for 20 minute papers can be sent to stephanie.hornstein@concordia.ca before 15 July 2023. They should include a title followed by an abstract (200 words max.) and a short biography (100 words max.). 

Contact Info: 

Organizing committee 

Stéphanie Hornstein, PhD candidate, Department of Art History, Concordia University and Concordia Library’s Researcher-in-Residence 2022-2023. 

Michel Hardy-Vallée, PhD (art history), Visiting scholar, Gail and Stephen A. Jarislowsky Institute for Studies in Canadian Art, Concordia University. 

Contact Email: stephanie.hornstein@concordia.ca

URL: https://library.concordia.ca/about/news/#guid=https://library.concordia.ca/about/news/#i28_Apr_2023_11:44:00_EDT

Call for Submissions: 2023 C. Herbert Finch Online Publication Award

2023 C. Herbert Finch Online Publication Award
The MARAC Finding Aid Awards Committee welcomes submissions for the 2023 C. Herbert Finch Online Publication Award. This award recognizes online publications, including virtual exhibitions, web sites, web pages and other digital tools that promote the use of archival materials.

To be eligible for the award, an online publication must have a stable internet address and must have been published between July 1, 2022 and June 30, 2023. The award is only open to repositories in the MARAC region and all submissions must be received by July 31, 2023.

Submission guidelines and additional information may be found at C. Herbert Finch Award.

Please send your submission packet and direct any questions to Committee Senior Co-Chair, Laura Bell at lbell0101@gmail.com.

CFP: Visible Designs: The Arts of Race and Capitalism (Symposium)

Call for Papers

 “VISIBLE DESIGNS: The Arts of Race and Capitalism”

 Interdisciplinary Symposium
University of Chicago
October 12-13, 2023

Plenary Panelists: Ashlee Bird (University of Notre Dame), Aston Gonzalez (Salisbury University), Silas Munro (Vermont College of Fine Arts), Kinohi Nishikawa (Princeton University)

We are seeking paper proposals for Visible Designs, a symposium that is bringing together researchers in History, Literature, American Studies, and allied fields (e.g., design studies, art history, others) who are studying the aesthetics of racial capitalism in the United States from the seventeenth century to the present day. Central to our discussion is design as a category for analyzing how people use race to make (and unmake) social lives in spaces of economic production, exchange, consumption, and waste. Our goal is to interrogate the centrality of visual and material culture to better understand how racialized capitalism functions, when it shifts over time, and where it manifests across a multitude of social sites in the American empire.

We welcome proposals for presentations from graduate students, earlier career scholars, and contingent faculty in all areas of the humanities, social science, and the design professions. The conference is organized to foster conversations between established scholars and emerging researchers. Our program will consist of four panels composed of invited faculty and emerging scholars; presenters will be matched with invited faculty according to broad methodological and thematic affinities. We encourage graduate students to propose presentations which reflect ongoing dissertation research. Presenters will be given funding to support travel and accommodations nearby the University of Chicago.

Sponsored by the Scherer Center for the Study of American Culture and supported by the Terra Foundation of American Art, Visible Designs will mark the ten-year anniversary of “Invisible Designs: New Directions in the Study of Race in American Consumer Capitalism,” a conference held at the University of Chicago in October 2013. Whereas our first conference emphasized the “hidden” dimensions of racial discrimination and inequality in the consumer economy, our sequel probes the overt, spectacular, and artful ways that Americans have crafted racial identities, maintained systems of racial domination, and built anti-racist social movements.

Possible topics include, but are by no means limited to:

  • The social lives of racialized commodities (iconography, furniture, cuisine, clothing, etc.)
  • Racial divisions of labor in craft traditions and artisanal manufacture as well as newer industries of design, advertising, architecture, marketing, and social media
  • The lived experience(s) of technologies, algorithms, and systems of racial inequality
  • Concepts of work, value, matter, energy, and waste in racial discourses and critical race theory
  • The narrative, graphic, and architectural forms that govern the archiving, writing, and curation of histories of racial capitalism
  • The administration of race relations and/or racial conflict in cultural industries and institutions

We invite you to submit a 250-word abstract for 20-minute paper presentations, along with a one-page CV, to conference organizers Chris Dingwall (dingwall@wustl.edu) and Korey Garibaldi (Korey.G.Garibaldi.4@nd.edu) by no later than July 28, 2023. Successful applicants will be informed in early August.

Call for Applicants for EBLIP Journal: Evidence Summaries Writers

Call for Applicants for EBLIP Journal: Evidence Summaries Writers

Journal URL: https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/eblip/index.php/EBLIP

EBLIP seeks to add several writers to the Evidence Summaries Team. Evidence summaries are critical appraisal syntheses, which provide analysis regarding the validity and reliability of the methodology used in an original research article. As such, they are a key component of EBLIP to aid readers in making informed decisions in their local practice. Evidence Summaries Team members are required to write two evidence summaries per year, with a two-year commitment to the journal. Evidence Summaries cover all areas of library and information studies, and we encourage applications from information professionals in areas such as school, public, and special libraries, as well as academic settings.


Interested persons should send a cover letter, indicating areas of strength they would bring to the role, and resume/CV as a single PDF file to Fiona Inglis (Associate Editor, Evidence Summaries) at finglis@wlu.ca by July 15, 2023. Applicants who are shortlisted will be asked to submit a sample evidence summary.

*Please note that Evidence Based Library and Information Practice is a non-profit, open access journal and all positions are voluntary and unpaid. The positions are an excellent opportunity for continuing professional development and gaining experience in reviewing and critically appraising library-related research.

**Only those applicants who are selected or shortlisted will be contacted by the Editors.

About the journal:

Published quarterly and hosted by the University of Alberta, this peer-reviewed, open access journal is targeted at all library and information professionals interested in an evidence based model of practice. By facilitating access to librarianship research via original research articles and evidence summaries of relevant research from the library literature, Evidence Based Library and Information Practice enables librarians to practice their profession in an evidence based manner. Please visit the Evidence Based Library and Information Practice web site (https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/eblip/index.php/EBLIP) for further information about the journal.

New Issue: RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cultural Heritage

Volume 24, No. 1 (2023)

CONTENTS
Editor’s Note, Richard Saunders

ARTICLES
Shelving Special Collections Materials by Size
John Henry Adams

Manuscripts in the Flesh: Collections-Based Learning with
Medieval Manuscripts at the University of Victoria
Shailoo Bedi, Heather Dean, and Adrienne Williams Boyarin

Placing Papers Update: The Black and Latino Experience in the
Literary Archive Market
Amy Hildreth Chen

BOOK REVIEWS
Janet Marstine and Svetlana Mintcheva, eds. Curating under
Pressure: International Perspectives on Negotiating Conflict and
Upholding Integrity. Review by Martha Tanner.

Jane C. Milosch and Nick Pearce, eds. Collecting and Provenance: A
Multidisciplinary Approach. Review by Margaret Gamm.

Jamie Simek. Beyond the Bake Sale: Fundraising for Local History
Organizations. Review by Susan Illis.

New/Recent Publications

Books

Ceglio, Clarissa J.. A Cultural Arsenal for Democracy: The World War II Work of U.S. Museums. Public History in Historical Perspective Series.
Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2022.

Herman, Ana-Maria. Reconfiguring the Museum: The Politics of Digital Display.
Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2023.

Robert Irwin, ed. Migrant Feelings, Migrant Knowledge: Building a Community Archive.
University of Texas Press, 2022.

Murphy, Brian Michael. We the Dead: Preserving Data at the End of the World
The University of North Carolina Press Publication, 2022.

Articles

Tara Murray Grove, Clara Drummond, J. Adam Clemons, Autumn Johnson. “Engaging with campus and community: Insights from a traveling exhibition.” College and Research Library News 84 no. 6 (2023).

Fogel, T. & Schrire, D., (2023) “Negotiating Tradition Archives in a Community Setting: Sounds of Silence and the Question of Credibility”, Ethnologia Europaea 53(1), 1-23. doi: https://doi.org/10.16995/ee.9433

Nick Thieberger. “Doing it for Ourselves: The New Archive Built by and Responsive to the Researcher.” Digital Humanities Quarterly 17 no. 1 (2023).

Sara Diamond. “The Dangers of Disappearance, the Opportunities of Recovery.” Digital Humanities Quarterly 17 no. 1 (2023).

Abigail Hollingsworth, “The role the LGBTQ+ Community Plays in Preserving Their Own History: The Rise of LGBTQIA+ Grassroots Archives.” SLIS Connecting 11, no. 2 (2023)

Reports

Living Wages Art Museum Leaders Confront Persistent Staff Compensation Challenges Joanna Dressel, Deirdre Harkins, Liam Sweeney. ITHAKA S+R Issue Brief. DOI: https://doi.org/10.18665/sr.319152

CFP: Charleston Conference – November 6-10, 2023 (in-person) & November 27-December 1, 2023 (online)

In Person: November 6-10
Online: November 27-December 1

We’re excited to welcome you back to Charleston, either in-person or virtually, for the 2023 Charleston Conference: Issues in Book and Serial Acquisition. Our theme this year is “Let the Good Times Roll!” 

Do you have ideas, challenges, solutions, or information to share?

We’re seeking proposals on topics related to collection development and acquisitions, including, but not limited to, the following threads:

  • Analysis and Analytics
  • Collections/Collection Development
  • Library Services
  • Management
  • Preservation/Archiving
  • Scholarly Communication
  • Technology & Trends
  • Up & Coming – Foundational information for those new to the profession.

Deadline for submissions is Monday, July 10. 

We also have a limited number of spots available for preconference workshops. Proposal deadline is June 5.

Submit Your Proposal

Call for Preconferences

New Co-Editor for Routledge Studies in Archives

Dr. Sumayya Ahmed of Simmons University will be joining Dr. James Lowry of City University of New York as co-editor of the Routledge Studies in Archives book series.

Routledge Studies in Archives was established in 2020 as a home for new theoretical interventions in archival studies, with a focus on sole authored books. To date, the series has published landmark new texts by Jamie A. LeeVerne HarrisPeter LesterVictoria HoyleMichelle Caswell and Jeannette Bastian, as well as edited collections on social justice, and Caribbean archival practices, with a forthcoming volume on archival materiality.

Dr. Lowry said “I’m excited to be working with Sumayya as we build on the early successes of the series. It’s important to keep renewing its vision and scope as the field develops.”

Dr. Ahmed, whose training and scholarship has primarily focused on archives and private collections in North Africa and the Arabian (Persian) Gulf, said of her appointment as series editor, “it is truly an honor to be able to steward new voices, experiences and perspectives for this vital series”.

Authors interested in publishing in the series can contact Dr. Ahmed at sumayya.ahmed@simmons.edu and/or Dr. Lowry at james.lowry@qc.cuny.edu