Digital Memory 2023 (recording included)

National Library of Estonia
08.03.2023

Official event website: https://www.rara.ee/en/events/digital-memory-2023/

The volume of digital content in memory institutions is growing, and the interest in it is diversifying. It continues to serve as a source for historians, political scientists, and social scientists, but increasingly also for data scientists and creative individuals.

https://www.nlib.ee/et/sundmused/digimalu-seminar-2023

The next Digital Memory seminar will take place in the Architecture Center (Tallinn, Põhja pst 27a) on March 30 from 10:00 to 19:00. This time the focus is on creative use of digital collections.

Inspiration comes from the presentations by Annika Rockenberger (Oslo University), Fredrik Norén (Umeå University), Vojtěch Malínek and Tomasz Umerle (Polish Academy of Sciences), Jessica Wevers and Rianne Koning (Royal Library of the Netherlands), Sophie Hammer and Martin Krickl (National Library of Austria), and Thomas Padilla (Internet Archive). All presenters join the seminar online and are in English.

In addition, there will be a discussion panel on the future of digital creative use and a practical workshop.
The day ends with the presentation of the newly developed RaRa virtual lab platform.
Both will take place on the location and in Estonian.

We ask that you register for the seminar no later than 23.03 at 18.00 so that we know how to account
for food.

You are welcome to share the invitation with your colleagues!

PROGRAMME 

10.00 Welcome  I Moderators for the day: Laura Nemvalts (Specialist of Digital Humanities at National Library of Estonia) and Krister Kruusmaa (Data Scientist at the National Library of Estonia) 

10.05 Opening words I Janne Andresoo (General Director at the National Library of Estonia) 

10.10–11.40 Inspiration panel (all the presenters join the seminar through Zoom; in English) 

Annika Rockenberger (University of Oslo Library) –  “Sharing is Caring. Digital Research Support, Skills Development & Special Collections Digitisation at the University of Oslo Library” 

The presenter talks about a core value of libraries: sharing. Sharing knowledge and information, but also skills, methods, and research activities. The University of Oslo Library is Norway's oldest university library and, until 1999, served as Norway's National Library, too. Now, it is home to a vast collection of research literature and several unique special collections of mostly non-Norwegian origin. With a recent strategic re-orientation, the library is focusing on digitisation in its various aspects. Their leading thought is: „How can we share our various collections  – and smaller, more dispersed collections at the faculties and institutes at the University of Oslo - with our researchers and students here in Oslo, in Norway, and beyond: with the international scientific and cultural heritage community?“. They employ a three-fold approach: 

  • They are partnering with and supporting researchers in their work, especially in digital methods and activities.  
  • They are investing in in-house digital skill development of their staff and digital skill development across disciplines from the graduate level up.  
  • They are establishing, training, and maintaining an in-house special collections digitisation team to bring theirs’ and others' collections online and make them FAIR  – in a sustainable way. 

Jessica Wevers and Rianne Koning (Royal Library of the Netherlands)  – “Creative experiments by students” 

KB collaborated with the art academy, creating artistic exhibitions in the national library with the digitized Alba Amicorum collections. Additionally, they created a living library by building interactive installations with students from the technical university of Delft using our digital collections. 

Sophie Hammer and Martin Krickl (Austrian National Library) –  “ONB Labs Artistic Experiments – Artists engaging with digital collections of the Austrian National Library” 

ONB Labs is the platform of the Austrian National Library for the scientific and creative use of digital collections. In addition to the general opening of selected digital collections as images, texts and metadata, the ONB Labs actively seek the exchange with young as well as established artists since the beginning of the ONB Labs in 2018. This talk discusses the process and results of the ONB Labs' recent 'artistic experiments': three programs that invited artists to creatively and critically engage with the library's digital collections, organised in the course of the EU co-funded project "Open Digital Libraries". 

11.40–12.10 Coffee break 

12.10–13.10  Discussion panel I “About the future of creative use of digital collections – where could we move on and what should we do about it” I Moderated by Peeter Tinits (Head Specialist of Digital Humanities at the National Library of Estonia) (in Estonian) 

Panelists: Kadri Vare (Institute of the Estonian Language), Mikk Meelak (Estonian Academy of Arts, Platvorm), Mirjam Rääbis (Estonian National Heritage Board) and Indrek Ibrus (Tallinn University) 

13.10–14.00  Lunch 

14.00–15.30 Inspiration panel (all the presenters join the seminar through Zoom; in English) 

Fredrik Norén (Umeå University)  – “Swedish Riksdag 1867–2022: An Ecosystem of Linked Open Data” 

The parliament has the power to transform society’s future. Its documents constitute a democratic resource for our present-day that, in turn, can be used by researchers to remodel our understanding of the past. In this talk, the presenter will present a newly funded research infrastructure project to enhance the possibility of exploring the Swedish parliamentary past. The purpose of the project is to (1) create a database of all members of parliament since 1867 and (2) to link members to the speeches they gave, motions they wrote, committees they were part of, and – if they were part of the government – bills they were responsible for. 

Vojtěch Malínek (Polish Academy of Sciences) – “Current Situation in European Bibliographies for the Humanities” 

The presentation will introduce the activities and outputs of Bibliographical Data Working Group (BDWG) of DARIAH-ERIC Consortium. Established in 2019, BDWG has gathered scholars, IT developers and data curators interested in bibliographical data curation and research. The main output of the BDWG efforts is a white paper "An Analysis of the Current Bibliographical Data Landscape in the Humanities. A Case for the Joint Bibliodata Agendas of Public Stakeholders" (2022) which is mapping current situation and trends in European landscape of bibliographies for humanities. Another project related to BDWG Community is a portal Literarybibliography.eu which tries to present European literary bibliographies in a joint interface. At the moment, three national datasets (Czech, Polish and Finnish) are available and systematically harmonised, while joint authority file is created based on re-use of wikidata. Last but not least, short overview of the Czech  Literary Bibliography research infrastructure and its internationally relevant activities will be given. 

Thomas Padilla (Internet Archive) 

Increasingly, libraries, archives, and museums seek to support computational use of their collections as data. This talk will share lessons learned from a national effort to support small, medium, and large GLAM institutions in the development of collections amenable to computational research and pedagogy. 

15.30–17.00 I Workshop  I Participants reflect on the ideas received during the day and ground the inspiration gathered I Regina Tagger and Margus Veimann (Service Designers at the National Library of Estonia) (in Estonian) 

17.00–19.00 I Presentation of the RaRa virtual lab platform by the National Library of Estonia team (in Estonian) followed by snacks and wine 

Register to the seminar! 

*First part of the day will be recorded. 

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