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                  <text>Digital archiving is gaining increased attention by both the general public and the scholarly community. The proliferation of digital content through networked channels raises cultural awareness of the ephemeral as well as ubiquitous nature of digitization. This collection highlights critical arguments regarding the digital humanities and digital archiving. The featured studies provide a broad cultural context and essential questions for archive creation and scholarly digital humanities research.</text>
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                  <text>Preservation in the archive involves the process of historical representation and connotes security, safety, and assurance that the collections will remain intact and uncorrupted for future generations to enjoy. Digital collections pose unique preservation challenges and require an assessment of risks, both material and intellectual, as part of the planning and  management policies. These entries illuminate standard archival preservation practices and present future trends.</text>
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                <text>&lt;span&gt;Russotti, Patti, and Richard Anderson. &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Digital Photography Best Practices and Workflow Handbook: A Guide to Staying Ahead of the Workflow Curve&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt;. Burlington, MA: Focal, 2010. Print.&lt;/span&gt;</text>
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                <text>Russotti and Anderson give a good basic outline of Digital Asset Management. In contrast, or perhaps complimentary to Peter Krogh's The DAM Book, the authors bridge the gap between novice digital photographers and more advanced practitioners. Most of the book is rooted in practical knowledge in regard to the field of digital photography and its preservation. The book urges a reorientation of visual literacy based on the relationship between digital and photography. Digital influence upon photography is evident in the way it has evolved and changed visual culture. The authors maintain that this evolution is not new and is due to technological advances that replace or modify older, existing ones. </text>
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                  <text>In 2003, the Library of Congress and the national libraries of Australia, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, England and other countries formed the International Internet Preservation Consortium, and have spearheaded an international effort to preserve Internet content for future generations.&#13;
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This collection aims to highlight materials that pertain to the process of  preserving elements of the World Wide Web using of web crawlers for automated capture of content.</text>
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                <text>This book examines various approaches to digital preservation of Indigenous history, culture, and communication. Historically, those aspects are passed orally through family as opposed to officially recorded and stored, risking the loss of significant traditions. Masenya explains different ways of archiving these memories in a conscientious manner. </text>
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                <text>- Masenya, Tlou M., ed. 2023. Digital Preservation and Documentation of Global Indigenous Knowledge Systems. N.p.: IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-6684-7024-4.&#13;
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                <text>Protect your digital resources! This book addresses critical issues of preservation, giving you everything you need to effectively protect your resources-from dealing with obsolescence, to responsibilities, methods of preservation, cost, and metadata formats. It also gives examples of numerous national and international institutions that provide frameworks for digital libraries and archives. A long-overdue text for anyone involved in the preservation of digital information, this book is critical in understanding today's methods and practices, intellectual discourse, and preservation guidelines. A must for librarians, archiving professionals, faculty and students of library science, administrators, and corporate leaders!</text>
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 Send to:&#13;
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Attn: Patricia Zline&#13;
4501 Forbes Blvd., Suite 200&#13;
Lanham, MD 20706&#13;
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