Digital Archives and Cultural Memory: Discovering Lost Histories in Digitised Australian Children’s Literature 1851–1945

Authors

  • Michelle Dicinoski Queensland University of Technology, Australia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21153/pecl2012vol22no1art1135

Keywords:

digital archives, Australian Children’s Literature 1851–1945, Children’s Literature Digital Resources Project (CLDR), AustLit: The Australian Literature Resource

Abstract

The full-text digitisation of literary works can have some unexpected benefits for researchers in and outside of the field of literary studies. While the broader availability and easier distribution of the text is a clear and intended result of digitisation, the preservation of extra-textual material—such as bookplates, inscriptions, advertisements, and marginal notes—is an unintended result that can help to expand our knowledge of literary networks, reading practices, and cultural history. This kind of material was preserved by the Children’s Literature Digital Resources Project (CLDR), whichdigitised nearly 600 works of early Australian children’s literature—including poetry, short stories, novels, and picture books—that were first published during the period 1851-1945. The CLDR resources are available online through AustLit: The Australian Literature Resource (austlit.edu.au)1. This article will look closely at some of the material found in the CLDR texts, including evidence of the books’ provenance (found in bookplates, book labels, inscriptions, and a handwritten letter), a newspaper clipping, and advertisements. Describing these discoveries can never be as informative as actually showing them, and for this reason, this essay has a companion online resource trail, ‘Digital Traces of Past Lives: Bookplates, Inscriptions, and Ephemera Discovered in Digitised Books,’ that guides readers through the digitised texts2. The discoveries are often surprising, moving, and unexpectedly informative. They remind us of the books’ material lives, their previous owners, and their status as physical and cultural artefacts. They can also tell us a little about historical literary and artistic networks in Australia, and the position of children’s book authors and illustrators within those networks. However, in order to make best use of these kinds of serendipitous discoveries, the infrastructure housing digital archives must be able to facilitate the search for this kind of material, as this article will go on to discuss.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Author Biography

  • Michelle Dicinoski, Queensland University of Technology, Australia

    Michelle Dicinoski is a researcher and a writer. She works for Queensland University of Technology on the Asian-Australian Children’s Literature and Publishing project and the CLDR project, and has previously worked on other AustLit projects. She has a PhD in creative writing, and is the author of the poetry collection Electricity for Beginners (Clouds of Magellan, 2011) and the memoir Ghost Wife (Black Inc., 2013).

References

Croll, R.H. (1948) ‘The bookplate and Australia’, Across the Years: The Lure of Early Australian Books. Ed. Charles Barrett. Melbourne: N.H. Seward. 141-148.

Dalton, M. Stieg and Charnigo, L. (2004) ‘Historians and their information sources’, College & Research Libraries 65, 5, 400-424.

Derrida, J. 1996 [1995] Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression. Trans. Eric Prenowitz. Chicago: U of Chicago P.

Erll, A. and Nünning, A. (eds) (2008) Cultural Memory Studies: An International and Interdisciplinary Handbook. With S. B. Young. Berlin; New York: Walter de Gruyter.

Kilner, K. (2005) ‘The AustLit Gateway and Scholarly Bibliography: A specialist implementation of the FRBR’, Cataloguing & Classification Quarterly 39,3-4, 87-102.

Lundy, M. Winslow. (2008) ‘Provenance evidence in bibliographic records: Demonstrating the value of best practices in special collections cataloging’, Library Resources & Technical Services 52,3, 164-172.

Mallan, K. and Patterson, A. (2008) ‘Present and active: Digital publishing in a post-print age’, M/C 11,4. Available from: http://journal.media-culture.org.au/index.php/mcjournal/article/viewArticle/40 [Accessed 20 March 2010].

Nicholson, J. R. (2010) ‘Making personal libraries more public: A study of the technical processing of personal libraries in ARL institutions’, RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cultural Heritage 11,2, 106-133.

Manoff, M. (2006) ‘the materiality of digital collections: theoretical and historical perspectives’, Portal: Libraries and the Academy 6,3, 311-325.

Quan-Haase, A. and Martin, K. (2012) ‘Digital humanities: The continuing role of serendipity in historical research’, iConference 2012. February 7-10, 2012, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Sturken, M. (2008) ‘Memory, Consumerism, and media: Reflections on the emergence of the field’, Memory Studies 1, 73-78.

Thompson, J. R. [2000] ‘Sir Rex De Charembac Nan Kivell’, Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Available from http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/nan-kivell-sir-rex-de-charembac-11219/text20003 [Accessed Januray 30 2012]

Towheed, S. (2010) ‘Reading in the digital archive’, Journal of Victorian Culture. 15, 1, 139-143. Turner, E. (1987) [1979] The Diaries of Ethel Turner. Compiled by Philippa Poole. Sydney, Collins.

Van House, N. and Churchill, E. F. (2008) ‘Technologies of memory: Key issues and critical perspectives’, Memory Studies 1, 295-310.

Downloads

Published

2012-01-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

“Digital Archives and Cultural Memory: Discovering Lost Histories in Digitised Australian Children’s Literature 1851–1945” (2012) Papers: Explorations into Children’s Literature, 22(1), pp. 110–120. doi:10.21153/pecl2012vol22no1art1135.

Similar Articles

21-30 of 191

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.