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                <text>Galvan, Margaret. &lt;em&gt;In Visible Archives: Queer and Feminist Visual Culture in the 1980s&lt;/em&gt;. University of Minnesota Press, 2023. http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5749/jj.1204241.</text>
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;Archives, Access and Artificial Intelligence: Working with Born-Digital and Digitized Archival Collections &lt;/em&gt;examines the types of collections that have been digital since the time of their inception. These include web archives, photoarchives, dark archives, and digital libraries. Digital archives have grown significantly in recent years, resulting in a growth of digital data, digital archivists, and new and open source software for the creation and maintenance of these digital archives. &lt;em&gt;Archives, Access and Artificial Intelligence: Working with Born-Digital and Digitized Archival Collections&lt;/em&gt; reviews how digital records are found, collected, appraised, and analyzed and the challanges archivists face throughout this process. It also explores how various disciplines interract throughout the archive creation, curation, and maintenance processes and examines possible ways to improve the communication and collaboration therein. Additionally, the book examines new artificial intelligence technologies, such as neural networks, machine learning, and handwriting optical recognition, and how they interact with digital archives.</text>
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                <text>Jaillant, Lise, ed. &lt;em&gt;Archives, Access and Artificial Intelligence: Working with Born-Digital and Digitized Archival Collections&lt;/em&gt;. 1st ed. transcript Verlag, 2022. http://www.jstor.org/stable/jj.11425482.</text>
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                <text>Kirsch, Gesa E., Romeo García, Caitlin Burns Allen, and Walker P. Smith, eds. &lt;em&gt;Unsettling Archival Research&lt;/em&gt;. Southern Illinois University Press, 2023. https://doi.org/10.2307/jj.9669312.</text>
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;Unsettling Archival Research&lt;/em&gt; is a collection of articles examining the way archives are currently created, curated, and maintained and how these methods might be improved. &lt;em&gt;Unsettling Archival Research&lt;/em&gt; highlights how current archival methods overlook or outright ignore multiple individual and community accounts of history, due to either the creators or the means of record creation.&lt;br /&gt;This collection details different ways of looking at archives, new methods of creation and curation of archives in order to preserve  the memories of underrepresented communities, and alternative methods of teaching which allow for open and critical thought on the methods of archival creation and curation. The articles highlight the tendency for archives to follow history in being selective in the truths the curators choose to share and reasons why this should stop. The contributors look at the historical treatment of the archive towards black communities, queer communities, women, incarcerated individuals, and more in this engaging and enlightening new take on the archive.</text>
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;Digital Archives and Collections: Creating Online Access to Cultural&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Heritage&lt;/em&gt; by Katja Müller examines how museums and archives create and curate their online presence. It explores how archivists in India and Europe decide how to create their digital archives, what platforms to use, what records and collections to include, what methods to use in curating and maintaining these archives, and how to share these digital archives with the greater online public. The book is based on anthropological fieldwork and follows certain digital archives as they tackle technical advancements and postcolonial initiatives, examine programming alternatives, handle editing content, and deal with the active use of the digital archives themselves. It also looks at community archives and archives that have been digital since they were created and how these archives interact with the greater archival world. &lt;em&gt;Digital Archives and Collections: Creating Online Access to Cultural&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Heritage &lt;/em&gt;provides a look at modern digital archives and the methods and reasons behind building these archives.</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>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>De Kosnik, Abigail. &lt;em&gt;Rogue Archives: Digital Cultural Memory and Media Fandom&lt;/em&gt;. S.l.: MIT PRESS, 2021.</text>
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