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The Virtual Archive and National Memory: Toward A Comparative Study of the Digital Library Models in North American and European Setting Marija Dalbello Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA dalbello@scils.rutgers.edu http://www.scils.rutgers.edu/~dalbello
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________________________________________ European vs. American Context Centralization (European) National infrastructure within government legislation; Projects; top-down approach; involvement of governments and ministries of culture, managing cultural heritage Dispersal and Consolidation within an accepted public policy framework (American) Transinstitutional and Cross-Institutional Partnerships; public National Information Infrastructure (NII) (telecommunications act of 1996); decentralized, competitive and cooperative; grant-driven; bottom-up approach with minimum government involvement; evolutionary growth and selection
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________________________________________ Theoretical Perspectives Theory of Cultural Production digital library’s role as cultural agency; American institutions- -the sites for the production, dissemination, and appropriation of cultural capital Cultural Authority Library and the social reproduction of culture (Raber 1998; Harris vs. Shera) Memory Institutions and the Invention of Tradition (Digital continuity, managing the record of the past) identity shaped by memory institutions; retrospective orientations in current digital library projects are sites for building national identity and “invented” traditions (Fentress & Wickham 1991; Confino 1997; Hobsbawm and Ranger 1983)
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1 3 2 tex t audience context Model for the study of digital library as cultural agency (aspects)
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________________________________________ Research Questions Who is Involved in Creating the Record of the Past? Institutional Contexts and Funding Patterns Information Maze or Coherent Historical Narrative? Techniques of Narrative Discourse and Historical Representation Repositories of Fragmented Record or Emerging Memory Narrative? Organizing Metaphors, Spatial and Temporal Markers of Identity
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1 3 2 narrative coherence (How?) organizing metaphors (What?) Institutionalizatio n (Who?) Developing A Study of Digital Library Projects
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________________________________________ The Method: Content analysis ARL (Association of Research Libraries) Digital Initiatives Database Web-based registry for descriptions of digital initiatives (408 registered projects) (http://www.arl.org/did) Descriptions of federally funded cooperative projects defined in the DLI (the Digital Libraries Initiative) Phase 1 and 2 Virtual Library, ACM Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval (SIGIR), and descriptions of projects of the National Digital Library Federation Limitations of content analysis from existing sources
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________________________________________ Criteria for Selection of Digital Library Projects for analysis: projects with "retrospective" orientation (i.e. deal with cultural heritage) significant initiatives that have achieved some sort of institutionalization and may be deemed to have or will have a significant cultural impact projects in the public sector projects that may reflect a distinctly “American” approach because they deal with cultural heritage, i.e. culture as conceptualized in the context of a national policy
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Who is Involved in Creating the Record of the Past? ________________________________________ Funding contexts (Saracevic & Dalbello 2001, in print): funding of governmental and non-governmental organizations funding of practical developments from similar sources funding from academic and public institutions funding for new implementations in their realm from professional and scientific societies and subject-specific institutes funding from publishers to enter the new age of digital publications and access funding for putting their treasures in the digital domain from historical societies, archives, and museums funding from collaborative contributions to provide for the common good in the new Internet (the tradition of "free information") funding for knowledge organization systems in industrial settings
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Who is Involved in Creating the Record of the Past? _______________________________________ Findings (institutional contexts) National type 1(digital library initiative phase 1 and 2) National type 2 (Library of Congress, The Making of America) University (Special collections & Archives) Public libraries Society / subject specific Institutes Publishers Historical Societies / Archives / Museums Transinstitutional, Collaborative distributed digital archives Institutionally unattached Various combinations thereof
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Who is Involved in Creating the Record of the Past? ________________________________________ Discussion Strong presence of frameworks defined by traditional approaches to collection development in special collections and archives (predetermines uses; obscurantism; static and passive collections; digitization of materials, less contextualization) Library of Congress - leadership and new approaches to collection development in the digital environment (contextualization, multimedia, collaborative efforts) From dispersal to consolidation Increasingly focus on collaborative efforts (1998+)
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Who is Involved in Creating the Record of the Past? ________________________________________ Conclusions Limited number of players; consequently, dominant models and those receiving most funding are not most innovative Major contexts (universities’ special collections & archives provide least innovative approaches but build strong presence in digital libraries) Increasing presence of public libraries Community memory projects
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Information Maze or Coherent Historical Narrative? ________________________________________ Findings: modalities of narrative presentation Topicality Biographical approach to organizing historical discourse Event-based approach Commemorative picaresque and episodic (non-narrative) Self-reflexivity Focus on local history Localization using physical metaphor Emphasis on invented traditions (the “famous firsts”) Glocal? (obscurity or diversity?)
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Information Maze or Coherent Historical Narrative? ________________________________________ Discussion Simplicity of narrative presentation techniques Story is a picaresque voyage through linear displays meandering around framed images of objects, figures, or landscapes Contextualization via localization, uniqueness, diversity Social position of collections, objects, and narratives is unclear Floating signifiers rather than signifiers eliciting coherent readings But, texts with strong Performative aspects Are these collections building “restricted” codes or contributing to “elaborate” ones? (cf. Basil Bernstein’s distinction of “restricted”/”elaborate” code)
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Information Maze or Coherent Historical Narrative? ________________________________________ Conclusions For all the emphasis on the retrospective content (the historical) as noted feature of the digital library activities in the communities of practice related to memory institutions (archives, libraries, historical societies, museums, etc.), they are weak in relating historical content Challenges: to make these discourses public and globally accessible Take advantage of “performative” potential to build new ways of including viewers
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Repositories of Fragmented Record or Emerging Memory Narrative? ________________________________________ Preliminary Findings Period best represented: 1860-1920 Subject focus: revolutionary war, civil war, african-american experience, local history; natural history; history of technological inventions; architectural styles; musical forms; evolution of print forms Originals: images, documents (published and unpublished), sound recordings, artifacts Digital Formats: Primarily scanned images, but also formatted electronic text, multimedia to lesser degree; bibliographic information Delivery methods: web exhibit, limited use of databases served on the web
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Repositories of Fragmented Record or Emerging Memory Narrative? ________________________________________ Discussion Contextualization techniques limited to integration with print source for access to data agglomeration, or integration with supporting reference collections Consolidation of genres and formats from multiple collections is limited to the Library of Congress
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Repositories of Fragmented Record or Emerging Memory Narrative? ________________________________________ Conclusion A recent evaluation of the National Digital Library Initiative at the Library of Congress (2000), states that NDLI is an impressive agglomeration of text and images but the problem is in the delivery of narrative content. If digital libraries springing up in various institutional contexts are as yet unconnected masses of fragments of data and visual information, they are obviously suffering from a lack of purpose. As a matter of public accountability for these new forms is to recognize whether they are accomplishing what they proclaim.
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________________________________________ Future Research In areas of: text, audiences, and context Text: Expand study using the same research questions to the “National” initiatives in Europe Audiences: Viewing process study audience responses; study situated viewers, tap into interpretive strategies (how determined by “protocols of viewing” and “horizons of expectation”) rather than cognitive science approach Context: Interviews with policy makers; how do “national” libraries’ initiatives relate to projects in the public and private sector; identify funding nodes for european context
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