Greetings!
While I was at SAA last week, David Dwiggins and I discussed posting to this blog, and I’m happy to submit some thoughts as a guest blogger. Due to spotty internet access in DC, I saved my posting for the return to Boston.… Read the rest
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Greetings!
While I was at SAA last week, David Dwiggins and I discussed posting to this blog, and I’m happy to submit some thoughts as a guest blogger. Due to spotty internet access in DC, I saved my posting for the return to Boston.… Read the rest
This session featured Ann Wakefield of the New Orleans Notarial Archives, Lee Hampton of the Amistad Research Center at Tulane University, and Hank Holmes of the Mississippi Department of Archives and History. The trio described their experiences dealing with the aftermath of last year?s… Read the rest
As part of the SAA 2006 reception at the National Museum of American History, the museum’s archives showed off some of its treasures. One of the coolest: these original paintings of the art destined to go on school lunchboxes manufactured by Aladdin Industries.… Read the rest
As a history student, I found this to be an utterly fascinating session. It was led by Roy Rosenzweig and Dan Cohen, both of the Center for History and New Media at George Mason University. The two presenters are co-authors of Digital History: A Guide to Gathering, Preserving and Presenting the Past on the Web.… Read the rest
Despite all the verbiage in the name, this was one of the best sessions I attended at the SAA conference, because it focused so clearly on a real need in the profession and offered a tangible and practical solution. The session centered on Archon a brand new software project that has just been released by Chris Prom, Scott Schwartz, and Chris Richel at UIUC.… Read the rest
Leith Johnson, co-curator of the Wesleyan University Cinema Archives, rounded out Thursday at SAA with a lighthearted look at how archives and archivists have been portrayed in film. There were audible gasps throughout the room whenever a character would do something that was not strictly archivally correct.… Read the rest