Tag: archives

  • Tall Tales and Shaping the Research of the Future

    Tall Tales and Shaping the Research of the Future

    By Helen Sunderland (@hl_sunderland) When I first saw the University Library as a new Cambridge student last October it looked like something from a dystopian novel. The library tower loomed above me – a modernist monument to humanity’s pursuit of knowledge. With the addition of a few slogans on the walls, I thought, it would fit right…

  • Translation and Digital Democracy in the Feminist Archive South

    Translation and Digital Democracy in the Feminist Archive South

    By Elissa O’Connell (@ElissaOConnell) As readers will surely be aware, 2018 has been a historically significant year for women’s history and archives. The centenary of some women gaining the vote has created many opportunities to celebrate women-led activism across the UK, as well as to reinforce the need to document and protect these herstories through…

  • The challenges and potential of Lahori libraries and archives

    The challenges and potential of Lahori libraries and archives

    By Mobeen Hussain | (@amhuss27) On my first visit to the Punjab State Archives in Lahore this summer, I met with the archive’s Director, Mohammed Abbas Chughtai, who explained that the archive and its libraries have received fewer visitors after the events of 9/11 due to concerns about safety in the country. The archive does,…

  • Towards a Google of Archives – Archives Portal Europe

    Towards a Google of Archives – Archives Portal Europe

    By Dr Marta Musso (@martamusso) For Historical Archives, investing in digitisation is an extremely expensive, time consuming, and complex endeavour. It is well worth the effort, but it is fundamental to implement all the opportunities that digital technologies offer to archives. Since the beginning of the millennium, archives and cultural heritage institutions have started to…

  • Sympathising with the Past?

    Sympathising with the Past?

    By Dominic Birch (Dominic.birch@gmail.com)  One of the most pleasurable parts of archival work is discovering new stories, narratives and characters. In the type of work I do (early modern social history) some subjects seem to jump out of the page, demanding attention. Take, for instance, the case of Sara and Elizabeth Mayhew, two women who…