Call for Nominations: MARAC Arline Custer Memorial Award

DEADLINE:  July 31, 2023 

The Arline Custer Memorial Award is presented by the MARAC Arline Custer Memorial Award Committee.  This award honors the memory of Arline Custer (1909-1975), MARAC member and editor of the National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections. 

Eligibility 

The Arline Custer Memorial Award recognizes the best books and articles written or compiled by individuals and institutions in the MARAC region – the District of Columbia, Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia. 

Works under consideration include, but are not limited to: monographs, popular narratives, reference works and exhibition catalogs using archival sources. 

Individuals or institutions may submit up to two works published between July 1, 2022 and June 30, 2023. 

Evaluation 

Works must be relevant to the general public as well as the archival community. They also should be original and well researched using available sources. In addition, they should be clearly presented, well written and organized. Visual materials, if used, should be appropriate to the text. 

Compiled works or works with multiple authors-such as edited volumes, co-authored works, or journals-will be reviewed in their entirety. Portions of a multiple-author work that do not meet award requirements may impact the submission’s final scoring. 

Preference will be given to works by archivists. 

Award 

Up to three awards may be given, with a maximum value of $200.00 for books and $100.00 for articles. The 2023 award(s) may be announced at a fall 2023 MARAC business meeting or shared with MARAC members via another means. 

Electronic Submission Instructions  

Electronic submissions are preferred. Please send a PDF of the entirety of the work along with a PDF of a letter of nomination to the Senior Co-Chair of the Arline Custer Memorial Award Committee: 

Tyler Stump 
Archivist 
Pennsylvania State Archives 
Email: tystump@pa.gov   

Physical Submission Instructions  

Please send two physical copies of each submission with a letter of nomination to the Senior Co-Chair of the Arline Custer Memorial Award Committee. Please email the Sr. Co-Chair to request the mailing address. 

Email: tystump@pa.gov  

Entries must be received by July 31, 2023 

For additional information about this award and a list of previous award winners, see the Arline Custer Memorial Award site: http://www.marac.info/arline-custer-memorial-award 

New Issue: Journal of Western Archives

Journal of Western Archives 14 no. 1 (2023)
open access

Articles

Getting to Know Digital Collections Users
Emily Lapworth

Neon in Nevada: A Case Study in Statewide Collaboration
Amy J. Hunsaker, Cory Lampert, and Teresa Auch Schultz

Candles Burning at Both Ends: Experiences of Dual-Role Archivist/Librarians
Robert Perret

Defining and Interrogating the Collection File in Archival Collection Management
Audra Eagle Yun

Assessing Finding Aid Discoverability After Description Improvements Using Web Analytics
Ashlyn Velte

Book Reviews

Review of Metadata for Digital Collections: A How-To-Do-It Manual
Elyse Fox

Review of Managing Business Archives
Erin M. Louthen

Review of Born-Digital Design Records
Nicole Grady Mountjoy

Review of Museum Archives: Practice, Issues, Advocacy
Laura J. French

New Issue: Archivaria

Archivaria 95 (Spring 2023)

Articles

Troubling Records
Managing and Conserving Mediated Artifacts of Violent Crime
Cheryl Regehr, Kaitlyn Regehr, Arija Birze, Wendy Duff

The Genre of Love-Me Binders
US Military Veterans Documenting Their Service
Allan A. Martell, Edward Benoit III, Gillian A. Brownlee

What’s In Between?
The Unarchived and Unarchivable Space of Found-Footage Cinema
Annaëlle Winand

Studies in Documents

Transferred, Preserved, and Destroyed
The Dominion Lands Branch’s Manitoba Files
Ryan Eyford

Gordon Dodds Prize

“I’d Rather Have Something than Nothing”
Presence and Absence in the Records of Transracial, Transnational Adoptees
Mya Ballin

Book Reviews

KATHERINE BIBER, TRISH LUKER, and PRIYA VAUGHAN, eds. Law’s Documents: Authority, Materiality, Aesthetics
Heather MacNeil

IAN MILLIGAN, History in the Age of Abundance? How the Web Is Transforming Historical Research
Amir Lavie

FIONA R. CAMERON, The Future of Digital Data, Heritage and Curation in a More-than-Human World
Beth Richert

Apply for Associate Editor for Case Studies on Teaching With Primary Sources

The Teaching with Primary Sources sub-committee of the Reference, Access and Outreach Section of the Society of American Archivists is accepting applications for the role of Associate Editor for the Case Studies on Teaching With Primary Sources series. For more information about the series, visit: https://www2.archivists.org/publications/epubs/Case-Studies-Teaching-With-Primary-Sources.

The Associate Editor works with the Editor to maintain the Teaching with Primary Sources Case Studies as a contribution to the professional scholarship and illustration of the application of the Guidelines for Primary Source Literacy. The position, in collaboration with the Editor, coordinates the review process and works with peer reviewers. The Associate Editor role shall become the Editor when their term expires, requiring a two-year commitment. The expected start date for the Associate Editor is August 1, 2023.

Duties:

  • In consultation with the Editor, identify potential authors and solicit proposals
  • Assist in coordinating the peer review process, and work with peer reviewers to provide timely feedback
  • As directed by the Editor, communicate reviews and feedback to authors
  • Promote recently published case studies to the RAO membership and broader community of practitioners

Applications will be accepted to twps-casestudies@archivists.org until July 7, 2023. Applicants should submit a short statement of interest explaining their experience editing; their ideas for including more diverse voices, institutions, and/or case studies; and a resume/CV. Questions may be addressed to current editors, Blake Spitz and Mary Feeney, at twps-casestudies@archivists.org.

Call for Chapters: Text and Data Mining Literacy for Librarians

Editors: Whitney Kramer, Evan Muzzall, and Iliana Burgos

We are excited to invite chapter proposals for Text and Data Mining Literacy for Librarians, an edited volume to be published by ACRL. Click this text to fill out the Google Form and start your submission. Please email Whitney Kramer at wbk39@cornell.edu with any questions. 

About the book:

Text and Data Mining Literacy for Librarians will provide librarians with a broad overview of the TDM-specific data literacy skills needed to support researchers. It will include case studies of library-supported TDM projects in a variety of disciplines, from the digital humanities to the social sciences and beyond. This volume will help librarians of all experience levels learn to support researchers utilizing TDM across disciplines and even conduct TDM research of their own. We will prioritize open scholarship principles and data-centric approaches to TDM when applicable and encourage librarians to think critically about the applications of TDM — especially with regards to social impacts, intellectual property rights, and power structures in facilitating TDM. Ultimately, this volume is intended to empower librarians, inform decision makers, and support our research communities as working with textual data becomes further embedded into the research landscape. 

Call for chapters:

We invite chapter proposals for the following sections. If you have experience supporting text and data mining research in any form, please consider submitting a proposal. Do not feel limited by the following suggested topics! We encourage proposals from first-time authors and authors based in any type of college or university setting. 

Section 1 – Essentials of Text Data Literacy

This section will provide a basic understanding of contemporary research topics and skills necessary for librarians to adequately support faculty and students who are conducting TDM research. Sample topics could include:

  • How to engage in a TDM “reference interview”
  • Data ethics in text data mining research contexts
  • Embedding critical theory into text data education
  • The role of library administration and management in supporting TDM

Section 2 – Education, Training, and Logistics 

This section will cover the many core mechanics of TDM, including data sources, licensing and legal aspects, collections management, vendor products, and administrative perspectives. Sample topics could include:

  • Text data sources and collections management
  • Library applications of text data mining: easy examples in context
  • Problems of text data mining in libraries: licensing and legal aspects of TDM 
  • Labor in supporting TDM education
  • Evaluating proprietary and black box TDM products

Section 3 – Practical Applications and Case Studies

This section will provide case studies of library-supported TDM projects in a variety of disciplines in order to help readers understand practical applications for TDM skills in the library. Sample topics could include:

  • Electronic health records
  • Engaging with ChatGPT and tools powered by artificial “intelligence”
  • Large language models
  • Law and technology
  • Literary text data
  • Social media data
  • Speech and /audio data
  • Text data in the digital humanities
  • Text data in the social sciences
  • Using TDM for library assessment
  • Working with multilingual corpora

Proposal Instructions:

Please submit your proposals using this Google form. The text of the proposals should not exceed 500 words. Be sure to include a working title, 3-5 keywords describing your proposed topic, and one or two learning objectives. (Note: These are not included in the word limit.) 

Submissions are due by July 15, 2023. We expect to notify authors of acceptance by August 15, 2023. See below for the proposed project timeline. Please email Whitney Kramer at wbk39@cornell.edu with any questions. 

Project Timeline:

  • CFP closes July 15, 2023 
  • Authors notified of acceptance by August 15, 2023 
  • Chapter outlines sent to editors by October 2, 2023 
  • First drafts due January 15, 2024 
  • Draft reviews completed and feedback provided to authors around April 15, 2024 
  • Second drafts due May 15, 2024 
  • Editor reviews completed around July 1, 2024 
  • Final draft submitted to ACRL by August 31, 2024

CFP: Back to the Future: Feminist Media Activism in Transition (special issue of the Journal of Gender Studies)

How has feminist media activism transitioned from the print era to the digital? What are the key events or moments of technological transition which have signalled shifts in feminist media activism or production (for instance, the rise of TV/televised events, radio, Xerox machines, hashtags, or TikTok)? And what methodological approaches (decolonial, queer, affective, archival, periodical) might we bring to the concept of ‘transition’ in feminist media studies?

This special issue of the Journal of Gender Studies uses the concept of ‘media in transition’ to explore how feminist issues and campaigns are shaped by the technologies via which they are mediated (Ardis 2013). In so doing, ‘Feminist Media Activism in Transition’ responds to Carter and McLaughlin’s call (2011) for greater attention to the material history and production of media texts. By foregrounding changing modes of technological production, this special issue invites explorations of both analogue and digital forms, and of the borrowings, legacies, adaptations, and repetitions traceable across feminist media past and present. 

We anticipate a broad range of transnational and transdisciplinary responses to this question, which might include explorations of:

•    the recent resurrection of a ‘vintage’ aesthetic in digital media;
•    moments of transition or ‘turns’ in feminist media archives;
•    the evolution of concepts such as intersectionality or transfeminism in feminist media;
•    how new forms of media enable self-authoring and autonomous production;
•    decolonial approaches to moments of feminist media transition;
•    how specific feminist issues are shaped by the forms (periodicals, magazines, digital platforms) in which they are mediated;
•    modes and means of the production of feminist media;
•    and of lost voices, muted moments, and marginalised narratives. 

We welcome submissions on a wide range of feminist media in any historical period. Papers are especially welcomed from scholars working on feminist media of the Global South or based in Global South institutions.

Contact Info: Please submit abstracts (max 300 words) to eleanor.careless@northumbria.ac.uk by 30 of June 2023

Contact Email: eleanor.careless@northumbria.ac.uk

URL: https://liberatinghistories.org/2023/03/14/call-for-papers-back-to-the-future-feminist-media-activism-in-transition/

New Issue: IFLA Journal

Volume 49 Issue 1, March 2023
select articles open access

Strategies for checking misinformation: An approach from the Global South
Anup Kumar Das, Manorama Tripathi

An evaluation of institutional repository development in African universities
Emmanuel E Baro, Anthonia U Nwabueze-Echedom

Collections, care, and the collective: Experiments in collaborative fieldwork in area studies librarianship
Ellen A Ambrosone, Laura A Ring, Mara L Thacker

Croatian adolescents’ credibility judgments in making everyday life decisions
Alica Kolarić

Open government data initiatives in the Maghreb countries: An empirical analysis
Elsayed Elsawy, Ahmed Shehata

Comparison of library studies programs in Croatia and the USA
Angela R. Davis, Stephanie A. Diaz, Russell A. Hall, Margita Mirčeta Zakarija, Irena Urem

Knowledge exchange and growth in a hybrid community – a social-capital-based approach: Evidence from Latvia
Guido Sechi, Jurģis Šķilters, Marta Selecka, Līva Kalnača, Krista Leškēviča

Knowledge management, organizational culture and job performance in Nigerian university libraries
Cyprian Ifeanyi Ugwu, AN Ejikeme

Academic libraries and the need for continuing professional development in Botswana
Olugbade Oladokun, Neo Patricia Mooko

Community-driven care of Lanna palm-leaf manuscripts
Piyapat Jarusawat, Andrew M Cox

Preservation and conservation of indigenous manuscripts
Sunil Tyagi

Data science education programmes in Middle Eastern institutions: A survey study
Mahmoud Sherif Zakaria

Examining the status of prison libraries around the world: A literature review
Syed Tauseef Hussain, Syeda Hina Batool, Ata ur Rehman, Syeda Kiran Zahra, Khalid Mahmood

A systematic review of crisis management in libraries with emphasis on crisis preparedness
Somaye Sadat Akhshik, Reza Rajabali Beglou

A review of international education literature: Interdisciplinary and discovery challenges
Shanna Saubert, Liz Cooper

Call for Research: International Conference on the Inclusive Museum

Seventeenth International Conference on the Inclusive Museum, MuseumsQuartier, Vienna, Austria, September 13 – 15, 2024. 

Founded in 2008, The Inclusive Museum Research Network is brought together by a shared concern for the future role of the museum and how it can become more inclusive. We seek to build an epistemic community where we can make linkages across disciplinary, geographic, and cultural boundaries. As a Research Network, we are defined by our scope and concerns and motivated to build strategies for action framed by our shared themes and tensions.

The Seventeenth International Conference on the Inclusive Museum calls for research addressing the following annual themes and special focus: 

  • 2024 Special Focus—Intersectionality: Museums, Inclusion, and SDGs
  • Theme 1: Visitors
  • Theme 2: Collections
  • Theme 3: Representations

Contact Email: support@cgnetworks.org

URL: https://onmuseums.com/2024-conference

New Issue: Journal of Educational Media, Memory, and Society

The latest issue of Journal of Educational Media, Memory, and Society has published! This special issue focuses on the visual analysis of history textbooks and other educational media. 

JEMMS is now available to read Open Access, beginning with this issue! Open Access availability is in part thanks to the generous support of the Leibniz Institute for Educational Media / Georg Eckert Institute. 

Please visit the Berghahn website for more information about the journal: www.berghahnjournals.com/jemms 

Volume 15, Issue 1 

Introduction 
Visual Literacy in History Education: Textbooks and Beyond 
Mischa Gabowitsch and Anna Topolska 
 
Articles 
Symbolic Nation-building through Images in Post-Yugoslav History Textbooks 
Tamara P. Trošt and Jovana Mihajlović Trbovc 
 
Politics of the Visible and the Invisible: War Images in Japanese and American Textbooks 
Jessica Fernanda Conejo Muñoz, Daniel Veloza-Franco, and Julieta de Icaza Lizaola 
 
Shaping Memory through Visuality: War Photography in Polish Secondary School History Textbooks after 1989 
Anna Topolska 
 
Imagining Peru and the Motherland from the Barracks: Memory, Text, and Image in the 1942 First Year Level Military Manual 
Lourdes Hurtado 
 
Visuals in History Textbooks: War Memorials in Soviet and Post-Soviet School Education from 1945 to 2021 
Mischa Gabowitsch 

Visual History Lessons Told by Der Spiegel: Picture-type Analysis of History Narratives Conveyed by the German Magazine 
Horst-Alfred Heinrich and Claudia Azcuy Becquer 
 
Looking without Seeing: Visual Literacy in Light of Holocaust Photograph 
Christophe Busch 
 

Sign up for Email Updates: http://bit.ly/2T6Deag  

Please visit the Berghahn website for more information about the journal: 

www.berghahnjournals.com/jemms  

Be sure to recommend Journal of Educational Media, Memory, and Society to your institution’s library: https://jemms.berghahnjournals.com/library-recommendation  

Call for Chapters: Archival Pedagogies

Archival Pedagogies

Editors: James Lowry (City University of New York), Tshepho Mosweu (University of Botswana), Pimphot Seelakate (Chulalongkorn University, Thailand), Magdalena Wisniewska-Drewniak (Nicolaus Copernicus University, Poland).

In 2011, the Pluralizing the Archival Curriculum Group (PACG) of the Archival Education and Research Institute noted that “Archival studies education programs are conceptualized in strikingly similar ways worldwide, largely because of the overarching bureaucratically- and legally-centered paradigms developed and exported from Europe through colonialism, evangelism, mercantilism, and technological developments, and later codified through national and international standards and terminologies” (PACG, “Educating for the Archival Multiverse”, The American Archivist, 2011:74, pp.69-101). 

While the work to critique dominant archival paradigms, recuperate subjugated memory and information epistemologies and practices, and create new archival modes in response and anticipation of social and technological change has been fostered in research and articulated in the realm of theory in major collections such as Research in the Archival Multiverse, and new monographs and journals, and operationalized in policies, procedures, and practices, the pedagogical implications of changing archival thought have been under-explored. Important developments in the teaching of archival studies are sometimes unpublished, and the extant literature on archival education per se has a relatively small footprint. 

This edited collection seeks to bring archival pedagogy into sharp focus, asking: What is the state of the art in archival education today? What are the histories and futures of archival education in different parts of the world, and how do they interact in global discourses and knowledge/power relations? What now constitutes the body of professional knowledge, the essential skills and competencies of the archival curriculum, in which places and why? What modes and methods are being developed and applied to the education of archivists, and within what structures and systems of professionalism, higher education, neoliberalism, etc? How do Indigenous, computational and other technologies of record-making and keeping factor into the content and delivery of archival education?

Although the book will be published in English, the editors are hopeful that students and teachers of archival theory and practice worldwide will consider contributing. To that end, we will explore translation options with prospective authors writing in languages other than English.

The chapters in this book will consider the histories and futures of archival education, the essential knowledge for records work in rapidly changing environments, means and methods for designing and delivering archival education, and the technologies of archive. Chapters in the volume might pose and seek to answer such questions as:

·       How has or can archival education respond to shifts in archival theory over recent years?

·       How has the landscape of archival education changed over recent years?

·       What can archival pedagogy contribute to the development of theory and practice? What does archival pedagogy as theory and practice look like?

·       How has the COVID-19 pandemic altered teaching and learning for archival studies and research? How will archival pedagogy look in the post-pandemic era? What will be the post-pandemic challenges for archival education?

·       Where do today’s norms of archival education come from and do they work for us?

What has been the role of archival education in propagating harmful or beneficial ideas and practices?

·       How have disciplinary inheritances shaped archival education and what results from interdisciplinarity in teaching?

·       What could developments in educational theory, practice and technology mean for archival studies? How might archival studies contribute to the broader field of education?

·       What is the place of archival education in the university? Are current pathways through education and training useful, limiting or exclusionary? What can critical or abolitionist university studies help us imagine for archival pedagogy?

·       Do apprenticeships and other workplace-based educational approaches disrupt, unsettle or complement undergraduate and post-graduate education? How do they benefit the record-keeping mission, and do they threaten notions of professionalism?

·       How have notions of professionalism and professional identity aided or hindered efforts to prepare record-keepers for the socially important work of record-keeping? What part has pedagogy played in this?

·       What are the current approaches to and priorities of continuing professional development and accreditation systems? 

·       What do changing job markets, exploitative labour practices and job and economic precarity mean for archival education? What should they mean for archival education?

·       What do environmental, social and political changes suggest for the archival workforce of tomorrow? How should archival education respond?

Guidance for Prospective Authors

Please submit manuscripts to Magdalena Wiśniewska-Drewniak magwis@umk.pl by 1 October 2023.

Referencing style: APA (American Psychological Association) 7th Edition

Word range: 5,000 – 6,000 words

The book manuscript will be submitted to Tampere University Press, where it will be peer reviewed, with a view to publishing it as a Diamond Open Access book, possibly in a new open access Information Studies book series.