Archive for calls, January 2021

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[Commlist] CfP “Historical Traces of European Radio Archives, 1930-1960” workshop

Fri Jan 29 13:38:51 GMT 2021





Carolyn Birdsall is very pleased to invite applications for their first TRACE workshop “Historical Traces of European Radio Archives, 1930-1960".

As you can read in the CfP below, there’s scope for participants to investigate cases ‘beyond Europe’, and we welcome contributions from researchers and practitioners working on archival radio collections, in view of media history, critical archival studies, radio/sound studies, DH/digital history etc.

You will also find a digital version here <https://omekas.humanities.uva.nl/s/trace/page/events> and a Twitter announcement here <https://twitter.com/archivalradio>.

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**Call for Papers:
**
Historical Traces of European Radio Archives, 1930-1960
*
Dates: 28-29 October 2021
Location: University of Amsterdam and/or online
Organisers: Carolyn Birdsall, Corinna R. Kaiser and Erica Harrison
Contact: (trace /at/ uva.nl)
Abstracts: 15 April 2021, no more than 300 words plus short biography
Acceptance: 01 May 2021
Papers: 01 September 2021, position papers (2000-4500 words)

Bringing critical perspectives to bear on radio archives is the main departure point for this international workshop, which explores broadcasting, archives and the historical data they have co-produced. This two-day workshop brings together interdisciplinary perspectives from scholars and practitioners invested in theoretically-informed, connective histories about radio archives. It takes up a historical-geographical focus on radio archival collections in Europe that were affected by war and political transformations between 1930 and 1960, including case studies for Axis, as well as Allied, countries during and after World War II.

The task of critically analysing the radio archive may involve researching the holdings of a single institution. In the case of European radio archives, however, the scholar is often required to “re-collect” dispersed materials as a result of changed institutional circumstances (Badenoch 2018) or the aftermath of conflict, war or regime change (Birdsall 2018). One strategy for scrutinising such dispersed collections is to elucidate archivist practices in describing and cataloguing radio collections, and reveal “tacit narratives” indicative of past ideologies or political investments in the archive (Ketelaar 2002). Another productive approach may evaluate past choices of particular archival tools or technologies in order to record, copy, store, or preserve radio recordings.

The workshop builds on the growing attention to the significance of archival processes for the scholarly understanding of radio history. Against a long-held tendency to decry the ‘absence’ of sound recordings in the archive, there is a burgeoning interest in the rich potential of the radio archive as an object of study (Dolan 2003, Street 2014) and in constructing “new histories” (VanCour 2016). Recent data-driven approaches to the radio archive have also explored possibilities for ‘big data’ analyses of digitized sources (Hughes et al. 2015, Goodmann et al. 2019), and speech recognition for the purposes of scholarly research (Ordelman and van Hessen 2018).

In response, this workshop focuses on connections between radio broadcasting, archival collections, and European history, thereby seeking to intervene in the fields of media history and sound studies that have rarely treated this interrelation. Thus, we ask:

  * How were archival collections established in radio broadcasting from
    around 1930 onwards?
  * In what ways were particular historical processes (e.g. war,
    conflict, regime change) significant in the life cycles of radio
    archival materials?
  * How have particular actors (e.g. archivists) or institutional
    frameworks impacted radio archival collections?
  * In what ways can the study of radio archival collections benefit
    from drawing on recent approaches developed in fields such as sound
    studies, digital history or computer science?


With the workshop, we seek to facilitate a conversation with specialists concerned with the complex histories of radio archival collections and the methodological possibilities for studying them today. The workshop sessions will revolve around panels with short presentations/discussions of ‘position papers’ (pre-circulated prior to the workshop).

Topics may include but are not limited to:

  * Media history approaches to the radio archive (e.g.
    transnational/entangled media history)
  * Impact of war, conflict or political change on radio archival
    collections
  * Provenance research and the looting of radio archives
  * Professional practices of radio archiving (e.g. catalogue
    description, metadata enrichment, selection and deaccessioning), and
    archivists as data/information specialists
  * Technologies of the archive (e.g. index cards, finding aids)
  * Materiality of archival records (e.g. recorded sound,
    paper/photographic documentation)
  * Archival uses of particular sound media and recording technologies
    (e.g. disc/tape recording)
  * The effects of decay, neglect or technological obsolescence on radio
    archival collections
  * Various collection types (e.g. off-air radio recordings, sound
    libraries, commercial music collections)
  * Computational humanities and the radio archive, including data
    visualisation


Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words and a short biography to (trace /at/ uva.nl) by *_15 April 2021_*.

The authors of accepted proposals will be notified by 1 May 2021, and the ‘position papers’ (2000-4500 words) will be expected by 1 September 2021. Further information will follow on the conference format, but it is certain that online participation will be possible, and a special issue publication, with selected papers, is planned.


The workshop is hosted by the research project *TRACE (Tracking Radio Archival Collections in Europe, 1930-1960)*, which is funded by the Dutch Research Council (NWO) and supported by the Amsterdam School for Heritage, Memory and Material Culture (AHM) and Department of Media Studies, University of Amsterdam. For further information, please see www.trace.humanities.uva.nl <http://www.trace.humanities.uva.nl>.

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