Remote Capture: Digitising Documentary Heritage in Challenging Locations

Adam Farquhar, Jody Butterworth, Andrew Pearson, and Patrick Sutherland
Open Book Publishers
2018-04-16

This is a must-read how-to guide if you are planning to embark on a scholarly digitisation project. Tailored to the specifications of the British Library’s EAP (Endangered Archives Programme) projects, it is full of sound, practical advice about planning and carrying out a successful digitisation project in potentially challenging conditions.
From establishing the scope of the project, via practical considerations about equipment, work routines, staffing, and negotiating local politics, to backing up your data and successfully completing your work, Remote Capture walks you through every stage. Bursting with helpful hints, advice and experiences from people who have completed projects everywhere around the globe from Latin America to Africa to Asia, this book offers a taste of the challenges you might encounter and the best ways to find solutions.
With a particular focus on the process of digitisation, whether using a camera or a scanner, Remote Capture is invaluable reading for anybody considering such a project. It will be particularly useful to those who apply for an EAP grant, but the advice in these pages is necessary for anyone wondering how to go about digitising an archive.

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Keywords

  • Anthropology, Archaeology and Religion
  • Material Culture
  • Social research and statistics
  • Z701.3.C65
  • Anthropology
  • Digital Humanities
  • Material Culture
  • EAP
  • guide
  • Photographic equipment & techniques
  • endangered archives
  • Endangered Archives Programme
  • scholarly digitisation project
  • Museology & heritage studies
  • Research & information: general
  • Photographic equipment and techniques: general
  • Research methods: general
  • Social research and statistics
  • archive digitisation
  • British Library

Remote Capture: Digitising Documentary Heritage in Challenging Locations

Adam Farquhar, Jody Butterworth, Andrew Pearson, and Patrick Sutherland

Open Book Publishers

2018-04-16

CC BY

This is a must-read how-to guide if you are planning to embark on a scholarly digitisation project. Tailored to the specifications of the British Library’s EAP (Endangered Archives Programme) projects, it is full of sound, practical advice about planning and carrying out a successful digitisation project in potentially challenging conditions.
From establishing the scope of the project, via practical considerations about equipment, work routines, staffing, and negotiating local politics, to backing up your data and successfully completing your work, Remote Capture walks you through every stage. Bursting with helpful hints, advice and experiences from people who have completed projects everywhere around the globe from Latin America to Africa to Asia, this book offers a taste of the challenges you might encounter and the best ways to find solutions.
With a particular focus on the process of digitisation, whether using a camera or a scanner, Remote Capture is invaluable reading for anybody considering such a project. It will be particularly useful to those who apply for an EAP grant, but the advice in these pages is necessary for anyone wondering how to go about digitising an archive.

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Included in Packages

Topics

  • Anthropology, Archaeology and Religion
  • Material Culture
  • Social research and statistics
  • Z701.3.C65
  • Anthropology
  • Digital Humanities
  • Material Culture
  • EAP
  • guide
  • Photographic equipment & techniques
  • endangered archives
  • Endangered Archives Programme
  • scholarly digitisation project
  • Museology & heritage studies
  • Research & information: general
  • Photographic equipment and techniques: general
  • Research methods: general
  • Social research and statistics
  • archive digitisation
  • British Library