A digital archive is born: Revisiting the Cinema Culture in 1930s Britain Collection

This paper explores the opportunities offered and the challenges involved in digitising, presenting and preserving data and materials on cinemagoing during the interwar years collected in the course of Cinema Culture in 1930s Britain, a pioneering inquiry led by Professor Annette Kuhn. The Cinema Me...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Julia McDowell, Annie Nissen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University College Cork 2021-08-01
Series:Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.alphavillejournal.com/Issue21/HTML/DossierMcDowellandNissen.html
_version_ 1818139909675810816
author Julia McDowell
Annie Nissen
author_facet Julia McDowell
Annie Nissen
author_sort Julia McDowell
collection DOAJ
description This paper explores the opportunities offered and the challenges involved in digitising, presenting and preserving data and materials on cinemagoing during the interwar years collected in the course of Cinema Culture in 1930s Britain, a pioneering inquiry led by Professor Annette Kuhn. The Cinema Memory and the Digital Archive (CMDA) project team is tasked with archiving and digitising the extensive materials that were originally collected in the 1990s: which include over a hundred audio-recorded interviews with 1930s cinemagoers and a wealth of related correspondence, documents and contemporary publications, along with postcards, diaries, scrapbooks and other memorabilia donated by participants. The primary focus of CMDA is to make these existing materials available online, applying the most appropriate formats and standards to make them accessible and engaging to a global audience of both scholars and the general public. In so doing, the project has placed an emphasis on developing logical and transparent systems for indexing and accessioning, collaborating to create a bank of shareable digital assets to help ensure interoperability between the project's own website and remote systems such as Lancaster University Library and Cambridge Digital Library. Drawing on our experiences as a close-knit research team, we describe the development of the project from two distinct perspectives, that of web developer and that of archivist. Identifying key issues, we highlight initial impressions and detail ongoing experiences and knowledge gained in the fields of cinemagoing history and memory studies, examining decisions taken in the early stages of the project that have enabled progression towards its goals. The challenges inherent in bringing such a valuable and unique set of resources ‘back to life’ and into the realm of digital humanities are immense; and we conclude by reflecting on lessons learned and offering fresh perspectives and insights to researchers undertaking similar work.
first_indexed 2024-12-11T10:35:35Z
format Article
id doaj.art-6eb0ea65b35a41978fd3f011b9e32b96
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2009-4078
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-11T10:35:35Z
publishDate 2021-08-01
publisher University College Cork
record_format Article
series Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media
spelling doaj.art-6eb0ea65b35a41978fd3f011b9e32b962022-12-22T01:10:43ZengUniversity College CorkAlphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media2009-40782021-08-0121144159https://doi.org/10.33178/alpha.21.09A digital archive is born: Revisiting the Cinema Culture in 1930s Britain CollectionJulia McDowell 0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5976-0408Annie Nissen1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4758-2947Lancaster UniversityLancaster UniversityThis paper explores the opportunities offered and the challenges involved in digitising, presenting and preserving data and materials on cinemagoing during the interwar years collected in the course of Cinema Culture in 1930s Britain, a pioneering inquiry led by Professor Annette Kuhn. The Cinema Memory and the Digital Archive (CMDA) project team is tasked with archiving and digitising the extensive materials that were originally collected in the 1990s: which include over a hundred audio-recorded interviews with 1930s cinemagoers and a wealth of related correspondence, documents and contemporary publications, along with postcards, diaries, scrapbooks and other memorabilia donated by participants. The primary focus of CMDA is to make these existing materials available online, applying the most appropriate formats and standards to make them accessible and engaging to a global audience of both scholars and the general public. In so doing, the project has placed an emphasis on developing logical and transparent systems for indexing and accessioning, collaborating to create a bank of shareable digital assets to help ensure interoperability between the project's own website and remote systems such as Lancaster University Library and Cambridge Digital Library. Drawing on our experiences as a close-knit research team, we describe the development of the project from two distinct perspectives, that of web developer and that of archivist. Identifying key issues, we highlight initial impressions and detail ongoing experiences and knowledge gained in the fields of cinemagoing history and memory studies, examining decisions taken in the early stages of the project that have enabled progression towards its goals. The challenges inherent in bringing such a valuable and unique set of resources ‘back to life’ and into the realm of digital humanities are immense; and we conclude by reflecting on lessons learned and offering fresh perspectives and insights to researchers undertaking similar work.http://www.alphavillejournal.com/Issue21/HTML/DossierMcDowellandNissen.htmlcinemagoingarchivedigital humanitiesdigitisationpreservation
spellingShingle Julia McDowell
Annie Nissen
A digital archive is born: Revisiting the Cinema Culture in 1930s Britain Collection
Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media
cinemagoing
archive
digital humanities
digitisation
preservation
title A digital archive is born: Revisiting the Cinema Culture in 1930s Britain Collection
title_full A digital archive is born: Revisiting the Cinema Culture in 1930s Britain Collection
title_fullStr A digital archive is born: Revisiting the Cinema Culture in 1930s Britain Collection
title_full_unstemmed A digital archive is born: Revisiting the Cinema Culture in 1930s Britain Collection
title_short A digital archive is born: Revisiting the Cinema Culture in 1930s Britain Collection
title_sort digital archive is born revisiting the cinema culture in 1930s britain collection
topic cinemagoing
archive
digital humanities
digitisation
preservation
url http://www.alphavillejournal.com/Issue21/HTML/DossierMcDowellandNissen.html
work_keys_str_mv AT juliamcdowell adigitalarchiveisbornrevisitingthecinemaculturein1930sbritaincollection
AT annienissen adigitalarchiveisbornrevisitingthecinemaculturein1930sbritaincollection
AT juliamcdowell digitalarchiveisbornrevisitingthecinemaculturein1930sbritaincollection
AT annienissen digitalarchiveisbornrevisitingthecinemaculturein1930sbritaincollection