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Archival Description People, Records, and Functions. Daniel V. Pitti Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities University of Virginia March 2003. Overview. Preliminary Thoughts Archival records Traditional and digital archival description Encoded Archival Description
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Archival DescriptionPeople, Records, and Functions Daniel V. Pitti Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities University of Virginia March 2003
Overview • Preliminary Thoughts • Archival records • Traditional and digital archival description • Encoded Archival Description • Encoded Archival Context • Encoded Archival Functions? • Preliminary Final Thoughts
Preliminary Thoughts • Cultural heritage communities: archives, libraries, and museums • Remembering on behalf of mankind • Memory is a human phenomenon • Memory is a philosophical problem • Recorded memory, no matter what techniques and methods employed, is reductive • Memory political (among other things) • An old example with contemporary relevance
Archival Records • Byproducts of people living and working • Individuals and families living their lives • Corporate bodies performing assigned or mandated functions and activities • Document human activity • Legal evidence • Historical evidence
Preservation and Use of Records • Preservation of records: physical • Preservation of context: intellectual • Records require context in order to be understood • Archival description provides this context
Traditional Description • Single print apparatus • Provenance-based: all records by a single creator treated as a unit • Components of description intertwined
The Digital: New Opportunities • Technologies • Network • Database • Markup • Emerging opportunities inspiring new and more rigorous analysis of the logic and structure of archival description
Digital Description • Recognition of the functional inadequacy of single apparatus • Increasing differentiation and formal definition • Components of archival description • Relations between components
Components of Archival Description • Description of records • Context of creation: creators • Functions and activities documented in records • Dedicated descriptive semantics and structure for each component • Components interrelated with one another
Records: EAD • Encoded Archival Description • Society of American Archivists and Library of Congress • Used internationally • English, Spanish, Dutch, French, and Chinese • 1998, 2002
What EAD Is • An emerging encoding and structural standard for archival description • Data structure • Communication/interchange • Finding aid / archival description • ISAD(G)
What EAD Is Not • Content standard • Data value standard • Archival management system
Principals of Record Description • Respect de fonds • Provenance • Original order • Hierarchical and symmetrical • Inheritance of description
People: EAC • Encoded Archival Context • XML-based prototype standard for encoding descriptions of record creators: corporate bodies, families, and individuals • International effort • ICA: ISAAR(CPF): implement & influence
Authority Control • Identifying creator entities • Recording name or names used by and for them • Rule-based heading or entry formation and control
Relations • Creators • Records • Functions and activities • Each relation qualified by place and time • Records evidence of people acting in particular places and times
Characteristics and Events • Person • Sex, education, address, competencies, activities, affiliations, awards … • Biography • Corporate body • Type, mandate, location, legal status, assets, structure… • Administrative history • Family • Assets and structure, activities, location, legal status… • Family history
EAF • Encoded Archival Functions? • Under consideration • Highly problematic • Intellectual and philosophical • Linguistic • Cultural-political • Legal • A practical approach is needed
Development Methodology: Intellectual and Political • Step 1: represent current archival description using the new technology • Step 2: experience and understand the technology and its potential to transform archival description • Step 3: transform archival description
Preliminary Final Thoughts • Unified, universal access to cultural heritage—good • Charles Jewett, the Smithsonian, and the Mud Catalog • Many technological challenges • Many intellectual, methodological, and challenges • And political