Library and Archive Collaboration for Digital Projects

Library and Archive Collaboration for Digital Projects

Collaborative Librarianship Volume 12 Issue 1 Article 7 6-7-2020 Context is Key: Library and Archive Collaboration for Digital Projects Joy M. Perrin Texas Tech University, [email protected] Robert G. Weaver Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library, Texas Tech University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.du.edu/collaborativelibrarianship Part of the Library and Information Science Commons Recommended Citation Perrin, Joy M. and Weaver, Robert G. (2020) "Context is Key: Library and Archive Collaboration for Digital Projects," Collaborative Librarianship: Vol. 12 : Iss. 1 , Article 7. Available at: https://digitalcommons.du.edu/collaborativelibrarianship/vol12/iss1/7 This Peer Reviewed Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ DU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Collaborative Librarianship by an authorized editor of Digital Commons @ DU. For more information, please contact [email protected],[email protected]. Perrin & Weaver: Context is Key Peer Reviewed Article Context is Key: Library and Archive Collaboration for Digital Projects Joy M. Perrin ([email protected]) Associate Librarian, Library Technology Management and Services, University Library, Texas Tech University Robert G. Weaver ([email protected]) Assistant Archivist, Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library, University Library, Texas Tech University Abstract Libraries and archives have different underlying philosophies towards items, metadata, goals, and core processes in their respective fields. With the proliferation of digital libraries and digitization efforts, both kinds of organizations can benefit from working together for the benefit of patrons and researchers. Pre- sented in this article is a case study of a collaboration between the Texas Tech University Libraries Digital Resources Unit (DRU) and the Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library (SWC), an archive of cultural heritage materials. Keywords: archives, digital libraries, digitization, digital collections Introduction basic projects. This article is a case study de- scribing how even though archives and libraries’ This article is about working together despite foundational vocabulary surrounding digital competing priorities and vocabularies. As archi- items, metadata, and collections differs, and vist David Gracy II pointed out in 2006, the “In- even though the two groups’ fundamental ap- formation Age has . [united] the institutions proach to digital project goals and core pro- and services of libraries and librarians, archives cesses are often disparate, both kinds of organi- and archivists, museums and museum profes- zations can find common ground. There are tre- sionals, and preservation administrators and mendous benefits in initially attempting to – or conservators in the fundamental enterprise of even doubling back midstream to – realign un- 1 stewardship of our shared cultural record.” Yet derstanding of these factors during the creation while galleries, libraries, archives, and museums of digital archival collections. Doing so benefits – often bundled together under the acronym not only the organizational partnership, but also "GLAM" – share a mission, they work towards it the discoverability and access experience of pa- in distinct contexts, each with their unique trons. This is the story of collaboration between goals, cultures, and standards. This can cause the Texas Tech University (TTU) Libraries Digi- wildly different understanding of even the most tal Resources Unit (DRU) and TTU’s Southwest Collaborative Librarianship 12(1): 68-79 (2019) 68 Perrin & Weaver: Context is Key Collection/Special Collections Library (SWC), and patron needs; and attempts at conceptual an archive of cultural heritage materials, and the cross-education. rocky road to their mutual success. Harvard had been thinking along similar lines. Literature Review In 1998 a team of archivists, funded by CLIR, published a comprehensive series of questions The nature of collaboration on digital projects and criteria for selecting digital materials in Se- involving both libraries and archives is a dec- lecting Research Collections for Digitization.5 Em- ades-old conversation in constant evolution. phasizing patron utility and demand, project Strategies have been proposed and pursued, les- cost, copyright ramifications, and other adminis- sons learned, then forgotten or miscommuni- trative considerations, it provided tools to help cated, rediscovered, proposed again, and re- librarians and archivists alike share their collec- learned. No single multi-institutional report or tions digitally in a patron- and resource-con- case study has halted this pendulum, as will be scious manner. Kristin Brancolini applied this shown in the following literature review, but the Harvard model to the University of Indiana’s case study of Texas Tech’s archivists and librari- Hohenberger Photograph Collection. It worked ans presented in this article propels the ongoing to her satisfaction, proving to her that there discussion forward via its own unique insights. were objective means to ascertain digital poten- tial among an archive’s holdings.6 In 1998 An- Early publications show an understanding of the drew Hampson independently devised a series core concepts underlying archival-library collab- of questions similar to the Harvard model, but oration. In 1998 The Library of Congress (LOC) emphasized cost-benefit analysis, and even elucidated the benefits of a national digital li- more so the digital projects’ copyright implica- brary, stating, “Academics, educators, and li- tions.7 brarians [agreed] about the rationale” for a sys- tem of widespread electronic access to the col- At that time, librarians and archivists were 2 lections of cultural heritage institutions. The So- thinking about the big picture. Yet despite these ciety of American Archivists had seen the inevi- examples, much of the literature produced in the table advent of digital collections the year be- two succeeding decades deplored a gap between fore, emphasizing foundational archival princi- archivists and librarians’ understanding of digi- ples such as maintaining the sanctity of copy- tal collections. Where had the tenets established 3 right. A year later, the Council on Library and in these early years gone? Perhaps librarians and Information Resources (CLIR) articulated ar- archivists had begun to emphasize the trees over chival analog and digital collections’ possession the forest. For example, zeroing in on copyright of a “logical coherence that binds the contents and cost-benefit became normalized. Copyright together” and “a totality that enhances the re- challenges were Sarah Hamid’s primary focus in search value of each individual item beyond her 1998 exploration of the challenges of digital 4 what it would have in isolation.” Context, they collection creation, noting copyright’s inextrica- argued, is essential to a patron-focused digital ble affect on the already subjectively problem- collection. Librarians should internalize that atic process of selection.8 Peter Astle and concept while archivists should, in turn, con- Adrienne Muir also observed that selection of tinue to emphasize it and its unique vocabulary. materials was “driven primarily by copyright re- The building blocks for librarian-archivist col- strictions rather than user demand” in the laboration were in place: a desire to create the United Kingdom’s public libraries, but, in the content; a nascent understanding of institutional vein of Andrew Hampson, also weighted heav- ily the cost-benefit approach to digitization.9 In Collaborative Librarianship 12(1): 68-79 (2019) 69 Perrin & Weaver: Context is Key 2008 Alexandra Yarrow, Barbara Clubb, and Jen- 2004 that librarians, archivists and, for good nifer-Lynn Draper, in a plea for greater collabo- measure, museum professionals, have “different ration between libraries and archives, focused organisational [sic] cultures, and lack a common on fiscal and temporal cost, the sharing of re- language,” they “talk at cross-purposes” despite sources, and the benefits of raising the visibility “common goals and visions.” Collaboration is of collaborating institutions.10 If such collabora- absolutely possible, she believed, but even sim- tion was present, their other criteria were taking ple concepts, such as the way they describe their widespread rhetorical precedence. Even massive metadata schema, sometimes proved a major consortial projects, such as a 2011 search by a hindrance.13 Take for example Jane Hutton’s large roster of Minnesota archives for a shared 2008 argument that while libraries directed re- digital asset management platform (DAM), em- sources toward creating digital access points for phasized administrative-level budgetary and in- their own online collections, they would be best tellectual property protection. Although authors served to capitalize on their resources by “[pur- Dora Wagner and Kent Gerber’s work here was suing] metadata standards to support cross- a valuable examination of numerous high-level searching, collaborative projects, and develop- case studies, one is left wondering what the ment of e-resource search software which inte- boots-on-the-ground, collaborative experience grates with the library catalog.”14 This is an ex- entailed.11 Were fiscal management, abundant cellent suggestion, and one widely implemented selection tools, and ever-improving technology in the ensuing decade. Yet she was not writing

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