Leveraging Technology to Facilitate Access

Automated Description of the Mariposa Folk Festival’s Born-Digital Performance Recordings

  • Katrina Cohen-Palacios
  • Sarah Lake

Abstract

In recent years, the increasing volume of born-digital materials (i.e., those created digitally rather than digitized from analog originals) deposited in archives has fostered the development of new software-based tools and workflows for processing archivists. Archivists seeking practical guidance for preserving digital materials have a wealth of resources at their disposal, including many community-owned tools, workflows, and tutorials. This case study examines how archival standards and technological advances have influenced the semi-automated description of born-digital audio records through the lens of a recent project at the Clara Thomas Archives and Special Collections (CTASC) at York University Libraries (YUL). The Mariposa Folk Foundation Fonds, containing a large and growing collection of born-digital audio recordings, served as an opportunity to design and test a new software-aided descriptive workflow. The project leverages the programmable nature of born-digital materials in an attempt to streamline the time-consuming process for creating the item-level descriptions typically associated with sound recordings and born-digital records while also improving the discoverability of this material in the unmediated environment of online finding aids. This case study demonstrates how technology has influenced descriptive practices, with the advent of online finding aids providing increased access to archival descriptions, online databases permitting keyword searching, and tools to script metadata extracted from born-digital records enabling robust archival descriptions.

Author Biographies

Katrina Cohen-Palacios

Katrina Cohen-Palacios is an archivist at the York University Libraries Clara Thomas Archives and Special Collections. She holds a Master of Information and a Master of Museum Studies from the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Information and a Bachelor of Arts with a specialization in public history from Concordia University.

Sarah Lake

Sarah Lake is the digital preservation librarian at Concordia University Library. Prior to her current position, she served as an archivist at Concordia University Records Management and Archives and in the library’s special collections. She holds a Master of Information Studies from McGill University and a Bachelor of Fine Arts in film production from Concordia University.

Published
2024-11-01
How to Cite
Cohen-Palacios, Katrina, and Sarah Lake. 2024. “Leveraging Technology to Facilitate Access: Automated Description of the Mariposa Folk Festival’s Born-Digital Performance Recordings”. Archivaria 98 (November), 72-101. https://archivaria.ca/index.php/archivaria/article/view/13991.
Section
Articles