Rediscovering Uniqueness: Archives & Special Collections
at UNO
Amy SchindlerDr. C.C. & Mabel L. Criss Library
U.S. Senator Chuck Hagel Archives
Arthur Paul Afghanistan Collection
Rare Books & Other Special Collections
University Archives
Archives 2.0
• Open• Transparent• User-centered• Technology-savvy• Archivist as facilitator• Open to iterating products• Innovative & flexible• Looking for ways to attract
new users
Archives 1.0• Closed• Opaque• Archivist- and record-centered• Technology-phobic• Archivist as gatekeeper/
authority figure• Focused on “perfect” products• Adhering to tradition• Relying on interested users
coming to the repository on their own
From Kate Theimer, Archives Next Blog:http://www.archivesnext.com/?p=2273
Amy C. [email protected]
Thank you!
Archives & Special Collections’ website (we’ll be bigger & better by the end of 2014!): http://libguides.unomaha.edu/ArchivesSpecialCollections
“As feeling becomes commodified and neutered through a variety of online filters, perhaps archives can hack us directly into powerful conduits of meaning and emotion.
How might this happen? There’s the technical stuff — persistent identifiers, blah, blah, blah — vitally important of course. But then there’s the relationship stuff. We have to stop talking about users and start talking about collaborators. We need to stop building services to be consumed, and start opening opportunities to create, to play, to break and to hack. We are all making connections.
Most importantly we need to find and support the people, both inside and outside our organizations, who are driven by passion. The people who care.”--Tim Sherratt (2012), http://discontents.com.au/archives-of-emotion/
Thanks to Mark Matienzo & his “Emotion in the Archives” for bringing this in front of my eyeballs.