No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
Sound in the archive: Media materials as archives of narrative
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 June 2021
Abstract
This paper describes and evaluates research undertaken by the author at the State Library of Queensland, in the collection, cataloguing, and presentation of audiovisual materials—specifically, sound materials beyond oral history and performance. It suggests that strategies drawn from transcription can make the sounds of the past more evident in digitised catalogues, and thus can make those sounds themselves more accessible to the public. In doing so it offers a different affordance of the archive to public experience: not just information about the past, but the affective impact of the past.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of ARLIS
References
1. Riello, G: The material culture of walking: spaces of methodologies in the long eighteenth century. In: T. a. R. Hamling, Catherine (Ed.), Everyday Objects: medieval and early modern material culture and its meanings, pp. 41–56. Ashgate Pub, Farnham, Surrey, England (2010).
2. Van Alphen, E.: Staging the Archive: Art and Photography in the Age of New Media. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (2014)Google Scholar.
3. Rekrut, A.: Material Literacy: Reading Records as Material Culture. Archivaria 60 11–37 (2005)Google Scholar
4. Burns, J. E.: The Aura of Materiality: Digital Surrogacy and the Preservation of Photo- graphic Archives. Art Documentation: Journal of the Art Libraries Society of North America 36(1), 1-8 (2017)Google Scholar.
5. John Rigby interview at Trove, https://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-215479961/listen, last accessed 2020/9/27.
6. Corley Explorer Homepage, https://explorer.corley.slq.qld.gov.au/, last accessed 2020/9/27.
7. Hinchcliffe, G., Whitelaw, M.: From data to meaning. Making Meaning symposium, State Library of Queensland, Brisbane (2020/2/6).
8. Gavin Bannerman, director of Queensland Memory, in conversation 2018/12/13.
9. Hinchcliffe, G., Whitelaw, M.: From data to meaning. Making Meaning symposium, State Library of Queensland, Brisbane (2020/2/6).
10. Corley Explorer Storiespage, https://explorer.corley.slq.qld.gov.au/#!/stories, last accessed 2020/9/27
11. Hinchcliffe, G., Whitelaw, M.: From data to meaning. Making Meaning symposium, State Library of Queensland, Brisbane (2020/2/6).