Foreword, Joyce Ray
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I. Strategies for Small, Independent Institutions with Few
Resources
Chapter 1.: The American Antiquarian Society: Digital Asset
Management in an Independent Research Library, Peter Botticelli
Chapter 2. The History Project: Increasing Access to LGBT History
in Boston, Samantha Strain and Peter Botticelli
Chapter 3. Historic New England: Building a Complex Infrastructure,
Peter Botticelli, Martha R. Mahard, Michèle V. Cloonan, and Brett
Freiburger
Chapter 4. The Maine Memory Network: A Statewide Collaboration,
Peter Botticelli and Emeline Dehn-Reynolds
Part II. Collaboration within and across Institutions
Chapter 5. The American Archive of Public Broadcasting: Media
Access and Preservation, Peter Botticelli, Bryce Roe, and Lily
Troia
Chapter 6. Cornell University Library Division of Rare and
Manuscript Collections: Exploring New Media in the Archive, Peter
Botticelli
Chapter 7. The Museum of Modern Art: A Cross-Institutional
Collaboration, Peter Botticelli
Chapter 8. The Boston Public Library: An Effective Strategy for
Advancing Digital Access, Peter Botticelli
Part III. Strategic Use of Resources
Chapter 9: The Victoria and Albert Museum: Collaboration for Better
Access, Martha R. Mahard
Chapter 10: The National Library of Australia: Digital Assets as a
Driver for Change in a National Library, Ross Harvey and Jaye
Weatherburn
Part IV. Institutions in Transition
Chapter 11: The Leviathan Library and Archives at the Jackman
Museum of Modern Art: The Impact of Changing Priorities, Michèle V.
Cloonan
Chapter 12: The American Textile History Museum, 1960-2018: A
Museum That Lives on Through its Collections, Michèle V.
Cloonan
Chapter 13: Phillips Library, Peabody Essex Museum: Divergent
Visions, Michèle V. Cloonan and Martha R. Mahard
Part V. Culturally Sensitive MaterialsChapter 14: Harvard Peabody
Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Peter Botticelli
Conclusion
Appendix: Interview Questions
Peter Botticelli is Assistant Professor at Simmons College School
of Library and Information Science where he is program director for
the Digital Stewardship Certificate. His current research interests
are focused on digital preservation and the curation of digital
exhibitions. Botticelli has A.M. and Ph.D. degrees in History from
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and an M.S.I.
degree with a concentration in Archives and Records Management from
the University of Michigan School of Information. His most recent
position was at the University of Arizona School of Information
Resources and Library Science, where he directed the School’s
Digital Information Management (DigIn) graduate certificate
program. Previously, he has held research positions at Cornell
University Library, the University of Michigan, and Harvard
Business School.
Michèle V. Cloonan is Dean Emerita and Professor in the School of
Library and Information Science at Simmons College. In 2012 she
became editor-in-chief of Preservation, Digital Technology &
Culture. She holds degrees from Bennington College, the University
of Chicago, and the University of Illinois, from which she earned
her Ph.D. She has published widely in preservation and the book
trades. Her most recent book is Preserving Our Heritage:
Perspectives from Antiquity to the Digital Age (2015). Her honors
and awards include the 2010 Paul Banks and Carolyn Harris
Preservation Award, from the Association for Library Collections &
Technical Services, American Library Association. With Martha
Mahard and Peter Botticelli she coordinates the Cultural Heritage
Informatics concentration at Simmons.
Martha R. Mahard is a Professor of Practice at Simmons College
School of Library and Information Science where she teaches courses
in management of photographic archives, art documentation, cultural
heritage informatics, and digital preservation. She holds a Doctor
of Arts in Library Administration from Simmons and degrees from
Barnard College and Tufts University. Before joining the Simmons
faculty, she worked in the Harvard University Library system for
many years. She is the co-author, with Ross Harvey, of the
Preservation Management Handbook: A 21st Century Guide for
Libraries, Archives, and Museums (2014).
A light in the darkness, Botticelli, Mahard, and Cloonan's timely
collection will help everyone from aspiring students to current
information professionals understand the challenges that libraries,
archives, and museums have faced over the past few decades, while
exploring potential solutions to our shared information problems.
With their engaging prose, positive outlook, and rich research
data, the authors encourage us to celebrate our commonalities,
embrace our differences, and prepare for a new future of
communication, collaboration, and innovation across libraries,
archives, and museums.
*Paul F. Marty, Professor, School of Information, Florida State
University*
Using over a dozen case studies, the authors illustrate how the
interests of library, archives, and museums have converged over the
last three decades, leading to new opportunities for collaboration
and innovation. Libraries, Archives and Museums Today offers
readers a rich array of stories about adaptation and transformation
of cultural heritage institutions in the digital age.
*Karen F. Gracey, Associate Professor, School of Information, Kent
State University*
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