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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>The Value of Digital Archive Film History: Willingness to Pay for Film Online Heritage Archival Access. </text>
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                <text> In the day and age of digital art, the concept of paying for tangible in person art has been leaving the public’s perception. This concept is especially true for the film industry, specifically for digital archived film and film reels. The willingness to pay for digital archived film has significantly reduced in the public’s opinion. This article discusses the continuous use for how the framework for continuous digital archival work for film would work within a modern day society. </text>
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                <text>Lawton, Ricky N., Daniel Fujiwara, and Ulrike Hotopp. 2022. “The Value of Digital Archive Film History: Willingness to Pay for Film Online Heritage Archival Access.” Journal of Commercial Economics 46 (1). https://www.proquest.com/docview/2631380321?_oafollow=false&amp;pq-origsite=primo&amp;sourcetype=Scholarly%20Journals.</text>
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                <text>Chadwick, Rhonda J. &lt;em&gt;Secrets from the Stacks: An archivist reveals how to store, digitize, and preserve documents to create a family archive and leave a personal legacy&lt;/em&gt;. PYP Academy Press, 2023.</text>
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                <text>This book is a comprehensive guide that addresses the modern-day challenge of creating, managing, and cherishing extensive photo collections. Spanning from vintage film prints to contemporary smartphone snapshots, photographs embody profound sentimental value, yet their disarray can be a source of frustration for many individuals. Adam Pratt, an esteemed and seasoned expert on photo organization, offers a systematic approach to reclaiming command over this chaos that afflicts many. Through a meticulously outlined workflow, enriched by robust software such as Adobe Lightroom Classic, Pratt empowers photographers of all skill levels to effectively organize, preserve, and share their memories. Pratt’s method includes ​​gathering, preserving, organizing, sharing, and maintaining photos. Whether one is a seasoned professional, an amateur enthusiast, or a dedicated family historian, this resource and Pratt’s method offers practical strategies to transform disorder into organization. This ensures that both current and forthcoming generations can bask in the warmth of cherished moments preserved for posterity.</text>
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                <text>Pratt, Adam. &lt;em&gt;Declutter your photo life: Curating, preserving, organizing, and sharing your photos&lt;/em&gt;. Rocky Nook, 2022.</text>
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                <text>  Atalan Çayırezmez, Nurdan, Piraye Hacıgüzeller, and Tuna Kalayci. “Archaeological Digital Archiving in Turkey.” Internet archaeology, no. 58 (2021).&#13;
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                <text>  Baillot, Anne. From Handwriting to Footprinting: Text and Heritage in the Age of Climate Crisis. Cambridge: Open Book Publishers, 2023.&#13;
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                <text>The climate crisis has altered many facets of life and has not neglected digital archiving. In her book, &lt;em&gt;From Handwriting to Footprinting&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Text and Heritage in the Age of Climate Crisis&lt;/em&gt;, Anne Baillot calls attention to the digital practices of preservation that have been contributing to global warming. Baillot asks the reader if our digital archiving practices are sustainable, and if not, are they worth watching the world crumble? Many methods are harmful to the environment, but are necessary, in accessing important information. Baillot examines these methods and their Western heritage, calling to the stand historical archive practices and their wastefulness. Not only does Baillot argue against these practices, but she also proposes new ones through her research. Our heritage is important and must be preserved, but not at the cost of the planet. “&lt;em&gt;From Handwriting to Footprinting&lt;/em&gt; illuminates the impact that digitization has had on the dissemination and preservation of textual heritage and reflects on what its future may hold.” Baillot believes that digital archiving is not evil but needs to be reevaluated and developed more mindfully. This book will be beneficial to those in the archival field, but also to those working on linguistics coming from the philological perspective.</text>
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;Archives in Appalachia: A Directory&lt;/em&gt; is a book accessible through the University of Central Florida library’s Primo search. The book is composed of entries cataloging and describing the 181 repositories available throughout 195 counties. These counties are confined to the South-Central Appalachia region. Appalachia is a historically and culturally rich area and contains a great deal of information to be archived and preserved. This directory is a step in the process of organizing and preserving the political, social, cultural, and economic history of Appalachia. In the table of contents, there is also a section on “Coming Attractions,” which lists agencies that did not collect material but aim to do so in the future. The directory also provides indexes that are sorted by subject matter and material type; this was done so to help researchers narrow down information on time. As established earlier, this directory covers a wide range of valuable information in many fields of work. This book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.</text>
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