Invited Talk 3: Complexities of Archival Metadata

Starts at
Tue, Nov 7, 2023, 12:00 South Korea Time
( 07 Nov 23 03:00 UTC)
Finishes at
Tue, Nov 7, 2023, 13:00 South Korea Time
( 07 Nov 23 04:00 UTC)
Venue
Gyeongha Hall 1
Moderator
Jian Qin

Moderator

  • Jian Qin

    Syracuse University

    Jian Qin is Professor at the School of Information Studies, Syracuse University. Her research focuses on metadata and knowledge modeling, knowledge organization, research data management, and scholarly communication. She has published widely and given presentations at numerous national and international conferences and workshops. Her research has been funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation, U.S. National Institutes for Health, and Institute for Museum and Library Services, among others. Jian Qin is a co-author of the Metadata book and the recipient of the 2020 Frederick G. Kilgour Award for Research in Library and Information Technology.

Presentations

Questions of Age, Questions of Evidence: Contemplating the Complexities of Archival Metadata for Historical Korean and Korean American Materials

遗产历史收藏品交易的元数据ditionally been retained for a range of logistical, evidentiary and accountability reasons. Reparative archival description and progressive bibliography movements have raised critical questions about equity, appropriateness and potential trauma associated with this metadata and have variously advocated for updating, annotating, removing or hiding it from public view. Even newly created metadata for historical collections, however, ages and is differently received according to the context and needs of the user. Drawing upon two collections of historical materials, this presentation will consider issues of age and evidence that arise when assigning metadata to archival collections whose digitized content and expected use move across time, geographies, communities, generations and political shifts. The collections that will be considered will be the Archive of the National Debt Redemption Movement in Daegu, South Korea, whose content chronicles the entire process and history of a nationwide campaign undertaken by the Korean public from 1907 to 1910 to help their government repay a huge external debt and thereby protect their national sovereignty; .and the Hyung-ju Ahn Collection, held at the UCLA East Asian Library, of oral histories from 1902-1945 of pastors, scholars, journalists, and other leaders within the Korean community who arrived in Hawaii and either settled there or later migrated to, San Francisco, Los Angeles, or Central America.

  • Anne J. Gilliland

    Department of Information Studies, University of California, Los Angeles

    Anne Gilliland is a Professor of Archival Studies in the Department of Information Studies, University of California, Los Angeles and Director of the Center for Information as Evidence, at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Her teaching and research interests relate to the metadata creation and management; and the history, nature, human impact, and technologies associated with archives, recordkeeping and memory, particularly in translocal and international contexts.