Archival Materialities in a Digital Age

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· Liverpool University Press
Ebook
309
Pages
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About this ebook

Materiality looms large in the world of archives, whether in storage, conservation, shape or materials of the records. Increasingly records are created digitally on a hitherto unimagined scale. How do born-digital records transform our understanding of the materiality of the archive? How do digital techniques provide new insights into the materiality of older archives? Archival Materialities in a Digital Age contains a series of authoritative studies by archivists and researchers who are grappling with these issues on a daily basis. The research presented in Archival Materialities in a Digital Age shows how these challenges are causing a reconsideration of archival theories and precepts while at the same time offering a huge range of opportunities to investigate archives in new and innovative ways.

About the author

Eirini Goudarouli is Head of Research at The National Archives, UK, where she leads an interdisciplinary team of experts. She has extensive experience in leading research and engagement programmes and in building impactful research collaborations and networks. Her passion is to drive innovation that enables new ideas for broadening our current understanding of collections and their discoverability through ground-breaking research, safe and responsible use of emerging technologies, interdisciplinary collaborations and knowledge-exchange initiatives. Eirini has published extensively, especially within the space of Digital Cultural Heritage. Recent publications include the contribution 'Digital Innovation and Archival Thinking', in Archives: Power, Truth, and Fiction (2023, eds Andrew Prescott and Alison. Wiggins).


Andrew Prescott is Honorary Senior Research Fellow, School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow. From 1979-2000, he was Curator in the Department of Manuscripts, British Library. He has also worked in digital humanities units and libraries at the University of Sheffield, University of Wales Lampeter and King's College London. From 2012-2019, he was Theme Lead Fellow for the AHRC strategic theme Digital Transformations. He was recently a co-investigator on the People of 1381 project. Recent publications include Communities, Archives and New Collaborative Projects (2020, with Simon Popple and Daniel Mutibwa) and Archives: Power, Truth and Fiction (2023, with Alison Wiggins).

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