WGBH Media Library and Archives

From: Allison Pekel <allison_pekel@wgbh.org>
Date: Wed, May 1, 2013 at 12:04 PM

I am working with a project that I thought might be of interest to the
American History Community.

I work for WGBH, Boston in the Media Library and Archive and the Archive
has been funded by the Mellon Foundation to work with academic scholars who
have interest in utilizing our moving image and sound materials through the
course of their research. We hope to increase public awareness of the vast
collections that digital repositories hold by publishing our entire
archival catalogue online, for open access and use.

Placing the catalogue online however is only the first step, as records may
be incomplete or misleading. To help enhance the quality of our records, we
are inviting scholars, teachers and students to research our catalogue and
contribute their own discoveries and findings back to us. There are even
limited opportunities there to catalogue and curate an online collection
specific to your field of research as part of Open Vault (
http://openvault.wgbh.org<http://openvault.wgbh.org/>). Final products
could include essays on your topic, streaming public access to one
selection of media in your collection, supplying metadata for the items in
your collection and/or presenting your findings at a conference.

As a producer of Frontline and Boston Local News, we have quite a few
materials in the American History genre, so if you have an ongoing research
project and would consider utilizing moving image and sound materials in
your work, please don’t hesitate to contact me.

Allison Pekel
WGBH Media Library and Archives
Allison_Pekel@WGBH.org

This Friday: Jillana Enteen Research Presentation

The Northwestern University Digital Humanities Laboratory Research Workshop invites you to join us for:

Jillana Enteen, “Technologies of Transitioning in Thailand: Create-your-own-Surgery, One-Click SRS and other Opportunities Online for Surgery Tourism”

This paper advances queer methodologies by looking at how websites generated in Thailand to attract Western medical tourists depict bodies in transition: both from the perspectives of sex/gender surgeries and transnational travel. The tools of digital humanities enable database collection and cultural studies claims about the shifting strategies and multiple translations deployed.

Friday, Dec 7, 2012, 12-2pm
Alice Kaplan Institute for the Humanities Conference Room
Kresge Hall, 1880 Campus Drive, #2-360
For more information, please visit www.nudhl.net. If you have any questions, please contact co-convener Michael Kramer, mjk@northwestern.edu.
NUDHL is supported by the Alice Kaplan Institute for the Humanities, The Graduate School, History Department, American Studies Program.