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Fwd: Call for Book Chapter Proposals for Item Not Found: Accounting for Loss in Libraries, Archives and Other Heritage and Memory Organizations

  • 1.  Fwd: Call for Book Chapter Proposals for Item Not Found: Accounting for Loss in Libraries, Archives and Other Heritage and Memory Organizations

    Posted Nov 18, 2024 07:02 AM
    FYI!!!


    ---------- Forwarded message ---------
    From: Emily Spunaugle <spunaugle@oakland.edu>
    Date: Fri, Nov 15, 2024 at 10:14 AM
    Subject: Call for Book Chapter Proposals for Item Not Found: Accounting for Loss in Libraries, Archives and Other Heritage and Memory Organizations
    To: 


    [EXTERNAL]


    Call for Book Chapter Proposals for Item Not Found: Accounting for Loss in Libraries, Archives and Other Heritage and Memory Organizations


    Editors: Anna Chen, Rebecca Fenning Marschall, Molly McGuire, Nina Schneider, and Emily D. Spunaugle

    Loss is inevitable in heritage preservation, and a nuanced understanding of the fundamental role of loss is essential to collections preservation, permanence, and sustainability. Cultural memory and heritage workers, too, face many other kinds of loss within the workplace that impacts their labor, including loss of resources, safety nets, and colleagues. 


    The conference organizers of the 2023 online conference, "Item Not Found: Accounting for Loss in Libraries, Archives and Other Heritage and Memory Organizations," co-hosted by the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library and Oakland University Libraries, seek proposals for additional chapters for an edited collection based on the conference theme. This collection will consider the ongoing reassessment of memory and heritage work and heritage ownership, as it is understood by libraries, archives and related organizations, through an examination of the multiple meanings, complexities, and resonances of loss.

    Featuring the voices of practitioners and scholars of libraries, museums, and archives, this volume will grapple with questions including, What is heritage and cultural property, and to whom do they belong? Who owns the past, and what does such ownership mean? How can a sustained interrogation of collection and heritage loss be productively leveraged to reckon with other kinds of loss in the cultural memory and heritage workspace? 


    We invite proposals from diverse perspectives on a range of topics including, but not limited to, the following:
    -Theft, repatriation, virtual reunification, shared print/collection development
    -Endangered archives, postcustodial archival practice
    -Approaches to loss in preservation and conservation
    -Other related aspects of practice and research


    We are especially interested in receiving proposals in the following areas:

    -Deaccessioning, redirections, removals

    -Human and resource loss, including loss of institutional knowledge, in and beyond the workplace

    -Loss and conservation of collections


    We welcome proposals of chapters that will thoughtfully engage with experiences derived from the practice of scholar-practitioners, including librarians, archivists, curators, conservators, scholars, museum professionals, students, and other stakeholders at any point in their careers, from institutions and organizations of all sizes, and including independent researchers.


    Timeline for Accepted Proposals:

    • April 2025: Completed first drafts of no more than 6,500 words (references included) due to editors

    • May/June 2025: Editors review chapters

    • June 2025: Editors return feedback to authors

    • September 2025: Authors submit final draft to editors

    • October 2025: Typescript due to publisher.

    Please submit proposals (400-word maximum) using the following form: https://forms.gle/ek3vmf8sCqDjPb4F8


    Please submit proposals by December 6. Submitters will be notified by January 6.

    --
    Emily D. Spunaugle (she / her), MSLS, PhD
    Coordinator of Archives and Special Collections
    Associate Professor
    Oakland University Libraries
    248-370-2498 spunaugle@oakland.edu
            



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    --
    Twanna Hodge, MLIS (she, her, hers)
    PhD Student | College of Information (INFO)
    University of Maryland, College Park


    --
    Have a wonderful day and week. Stay safe and well.

    Take care, 
    Twanna 

    Twanna Hodge, MLIS (she, her, hers)
    PhD Student | Information Studies
    University of Maryland, College Park
    2013 Spectrum Scholar  
    2022 Spectrum Doctoral Fellow