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Dear colleagues,

My apologies for cross-posting!

The Archivists Round Table of Metropolitan New York is delighted to
announce the CFP for the New York Archives Week Symposium. This year's
symposium is focused on labor issues and examines aspects of increasingly
invisible/complex born-digital workflows, addressing structural racism, and
cultivating interdisciplinary collaboration and mutual support.

The symposium is being held virtually and we're hoping to draw submissions
from across the country and representative of a range of archival and
allied professions. Please consider applying.

Best regards,
Amye McCarther

--
Amye McCarther (she/her)
President
Archivists Round Table of Metropolitan New York, Inc.

Archivists Round Table <http://www.nycarchivists.org/> | Metropolitan
Archivist <https://medium.com/@metropolitanarchivist> | Advocacy
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*Call For Proposals: New York Archives Week Symposium*

The Archivists Round Table of Metropolitan New York is pleased to announce
our Call for Proposals for our forthcoming annual New York Archives Week
Symposium, which will take place online on Thursday, October 22nd, 2020.
This year’s symposium will address urgent topics surrounding the interplay
between the increasing technological complexity of the born-digital
historical record and remote work, issues of precarity in archival labor,
and the necessity of addressing structural racism in our institutions and
individual practices.

We invite presentations from archivists, records managers, curators,
historians, special collections librarians, and allied professionals that
highlight the value that archival collections and archivist expertise have
in this unprecedented moment of uncertainty and global solidarity (details
below).

Interested candidates are encouraged to submit a 1-2 paragraph abstract
(500 words, max) via this form by midnight Monday, August 17, 2020:
https://nycarchivists.wufoo.com/forms/x2p0qma0co9ye2/
<http://www.nycarchivists.org/EmailTracker/LinkTracker.ashx?linkAndRecipientCode=hZ1GrGIBssclfncfjlgq1NmWnlfA4d9FktZby9q0C3UcaugyHstQozhM0FsyHqNmDkJzC1T3j8WLR3ujbwGvhWFXElYRPlIOXkfr%2btzJWdk%3d>

*Panel Discussion: Re-Centering Embedded Knowledge in the Archival
Technosphere *

*“Working with a multitude of digital tools is now a core part of an
archivist’s skillset.”*
*-* Gregory Wiedeman, University at Albany, State University of New York

The role of archivists has become inseparable from digital stewardship as
rapidly evolving technologies permeate all realms of social activity. As
the diversity and quantity of digital records and media proliferate,
archival interventions to prevent the loss of important historical
materials becomes ever more important. The work of archivists provides a
backstop against the ephemerality of digital content and its attendant
cultural amnesia. To keep pace with the scale and heterogeneity of digital
materials to be preserved, archivists have adopted an ever-growing suite of
proprietary and open source digital tools.

Yet, even as archivists prove themselves to be nimble at augmenting their
workflows to account for new forms of digital records and media, they risk
having their labor elided by the sophistication of the technology itself.
Much effort has been devoted to access and seamless user experience in
digital collections, often at the cost of erasing interaction with
collection stewards with subject expertise. Likewise, the ubiquity of the
term “archive” in a burgeoning array of consumer technologies continues to
shade the general understanding of archival practice into that of an IT
service with a software solution, rendering the historically and ethically
rooted work of archivists invisible to general users and institutional
administrators alike.

This tension between the advantages of harnessing technologies to expand
services and the disadvantage that these very technologies pose in
contributing to the erasure of archival labor has long-term consequences
for how this labor is valued and how collections care is resourced. *How do
these competing tendencies productively complement rather than displace
each other? How does technology interface with archival concerns of
institutional memory and transparency, intellectual property, historical
research, or restorative justice? How do we design systems that make
archival labor visible, and that reinforce the value of embedded knowledge
and archival expertise? How has the shift to remote/virtual work due to the
COVID-19 pandemic affected the visibility of this labor? And, importantly,
how can we re-center memory work of historically marginalized groups within
this sphere?*

This session seeks case studies that showcase innovative approaches to
designing workflows that harness technology to optimize archival practice
and how adaptive uses of digital tools dove-tail with embedded knowledge
and archival expertise. We invite case studies ranging from
enterprise-level infrastructure, to bespoke Python scripts, to issues
surrounding remote work and virtual reference, especially those with an eye
towards how cultural and contextual differences come into play.

*Community Roundtable: Collectivity, Allyship, and Mutual Support:
Cultivating Collaboration and Solidarity in the Workplace*

The role of archivist is often characterized as the solitary work of
tending to history in its recorded form, conducted away from the whirlwind
of other institutional activities. Even as access has moved outward from
the stacks to the public sphere online, demanding teams of digitization,
cataloging and curatorial workers to bring hidden collections to the fore,
archival work often remains siloed from other institutional activities. In
many cases, we more regularly interface with scholars and answer press
inquiries than communicate with our co-workers.

The independence and autonomy that archivists embrace as part of their
calling can have its drawbacks. Archivists regularly contend with
inadequate resources to address a widening array of responsibilities and
urgencies to protect ephemeral media. While the technical and educational
demands of the field have increased, compensation and job security have
remained uneven, particularly for emerging professionals. This precarity
places both collections and their stewards at risk, and has a negative
impact on the diversity of the profession.

The COVID-19 pandemic is taking place against the backdrop of a resurgence
of organizing activity in the cultural sector and renewed calls to
dismantle structural racism within our institutions, with serious
implications for archivists in a variety of institutional contexts. *How do
we balance the benefits of collectivity with the vulnerability of our
outlier status? What other forms of allyship can we be cultivating to
support underrepresented groups in our institutions and foster more
sustainable workplace practices in the field more generally? What specific
strategies and policies can we look towards when the needs of archival
workers and archival collections are not being acknowledged and met? In
what ways can cross-disciplinary collaboration shed light on disparities or
offer opportunities for mutual support?*

This roundtable session seeks participants to share experiences and
insights in working towards equity within their institutions. We invite
proposals for short presentations from a variety of professional contexts
that illustrate the mosaic of individual and collaborative activities that
collectively contribute to sustainability and workplace justice. Following
the presentations, we will open the floor for discussion. *In order to
foster candid dialogue between colleagues, this session will only be open
to registered attendees and will not be recorded. *


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