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Dear Colleagues,

In late 2018, Collections as Data: Part to Whole
<https://collectionsasdata.github.io/part2whole/> was awarded $750,000 by
the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
<https://collectionsasdata.github.io/part2whole/mellon/>. $600,000 of this
award is being regranted, across two cohorts, to foster development of
models that support collections as data implementation and use. Cohort 1
activity is nearing completion - be on the lookout for a livestreamed
summative forum January 17, 2020 and a full release of all cohort project
deliverables by April 2020.

*The cohort 2 funding opportunity was reshaped in light of what we learned
from cohort 1. We **received** a number of very strong proposals from
across the country and today we are super excited to announce the formation
of cohort 2.*

Cohort 2 projects come from a range of institutional contexts, grounded by
a desire to reimagine roles and services so that we and users can explore
the potential of collections as data. In addition to using regranted funds
to pursue their projects, teams will engage in joint developmental
activities that culminate in a public facing forum and the release of a
series of open resources that aim to advance collections as data work
across the cultural heritage community.

Please join us in congratulating these teams!

Thomas Padilla (University of Nevada Las Vegas)

Hannah Scates Kettler (Iowa State University)

Stewart Varner (University of Pennsylvania)

Yasmeen Shorish (James Madison University)

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*…And 25 of our closest friends: The Louisiana Digital Library as
Community-Focused Data*

Louisiana State University

Scott Ziegler, Gina Costello, Leah Powell, Elizabeth Joan Kelly

*The Louisiana Digital Library (LDL) is a state-wide resource for sharing
digital heritage content from public libraries, academic libraries,
museums, and archives. Our project enables librarians, archivists, and
curators from across Louisiana to gather as a community of practice and
explore the policy, practice, and ethics of reconceptualizing the LDL as
data. By producing a series of sample collections as data, this project
will foster community around a state-wide goal of building computationally
meaningful collections that are ethically-grounded and culturally relevant.*

*Using Newspapers as Data for Collaborative Pedagogy: A Multidisciplinary
Interrogation of the Borderlands in Undergraduate Classrooms*

University of Arizona

Mary Feeney, Sarah Shreeves, Anita Huizar-Hernández

*Using Newspapers as Data for Collaborative Pedagogy: A Multidisciplinary
Interrogation of the Borderlands in Undergraduate Classrooms explores how
historical newspapers packaged as a single “collection as data” can act as
a point of convergence for collaborative pedagogy in the undergraduate
classroom. The dataset will include selections from the University of
Arizona Libraries’ Historic Mexican and Mexican American Press digital
collection and Arizona newspapers digitized for the National Digital
Newspaper Program, including Spanish-language newspapers, newspapers of
African American communities, and newspapers from predominantly white
English-speaking communities, all located within the Southwest during two
periods from 1915 to 1922 and 1941 to 1959. Faculty members participating
in the project will use newspapers as data to explore topics in their
courses in History, Journalism, English, and Spanish and Portuguese during
the Fall 2020 semester. The project will culminate in an undergraduate
symposium and a white paper with recommendations based on lessons learned.*

*Images as Data: Processing, Exploration, and Discovery at Scale*

Harvard University and University of Richmond

Carol Chiodo, Lidia Uziel, Lauren Tilton, Taylor Arnold

*Images as Data will increase the means of access and discovery of
born-digital collections of photography and moving images. The project will
draw from three born-digital collections of European ephemera from Harvard
University Library and two digitized collections from the Harvard Art
Museums. These contemporary materials provide unique testimony on political
unrest and the culture of protest in Europe, in the context of rising
nationalism, anti-immigration movements, globalism and international
migration. Through the implementation of computer vision techniques,
including the distant viewing framework, the project will provide a model
for expanding the processing of digital images and subsequent algorithmic
discovery of connections across collections. It will also illustrate how
distant viewing can offer a paradigm for addressing the social and ethical
challenges of using machine learning with images, particularly of sensitive
topics.*

*LGBTQ+ Audio Archive Mining Project*

University of Wisconsin Milwaukee

Ann Hanlon, Dan Siercks, Marcy Bidney, Cary Costello

*The UWM Libraries house one of the largest collections of historical and
contemporary LGBTQ+ materials in Wisconsin and the Midwest, including a
rich record of Milwaukee’s LGBTQ+ communities. The LGBTQ+ Audio Archive
Mining Project will use machine learning tools and data analysis and
visualization to build and process text datasets extracted from a variety
of AV materials in these collections, including collections of oral
histories, local television news and radio broadcasts, and early LGBTQ+
community cable programming. The LGBTQ+ Audio Archive Mining Project will
aid in better understanding the contents of these collections, and enhance
discoverability of previously unrecognized topics, relationships, and
patterns that shed light on the history of the LGBTQ+ community in
Milwaukee and the Midwest.*

*Surfacing hidden water data: Water, people, displacement in Southern
California*

Claremont Colleges

Jeanine Finn, Jessica Dávila Greene, Char Miller

*With this grant, the Claremont Colleges Library will bring computational
accessibility to the digitized materials in its wide-ranging California
Water Documents collection. This collection includes over 13,000 digital
files of mixed archival materials, including journals, ledgers,
correspondence, field notes, and maps documenting the history of water use
in Southern California in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This rich
collection has the potential to surface the histories of the earliest
inhabitants of the west (including the Cahuilla and Paiute peoples) who
utilized local waterways to those who exploited the First People’s
knowledge and labor to build the region’s modern agriculture and urban
economy. The project team will collaborate with community partners to
attach appropriate indigenous place names, include coordinates for
geographic materials, and make PDF and image files fully discoverable and
computationally useful.*

*dLOC as Data: A Thematic Approach to Caribbean Newspapers*

Florida International University

Miguel Asencio, Jamie Rogers, Perry Collins, Hadassah St. Hubert

*Digital Library of the Caribbean (dLOC) intends to enhance access to its
existing Caribbean newspaper collections by making texts available for bulk
download to its users. This will facilitate modes of scholarship that
depend on access to image and textual data at scale and will enable a new
level of access to titles not included in newspaper data resources such as
Chronicling America. To meet the needs of the dLOC community for teaching
and research, we will demonstrate the potential of newspaper data by
creating a pilot thematic tool kit focused on hurricanes and tropical
cyclones. The toolkit will provide multilingual datasets focused on these
disasters from several countries and islands in the Caribbean, such as the
Bahamas, Belize, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Grenada, Haiti, Jamaica, and
Martinique.*
--
Thomas Padilla

Interim Head, Knowledge Production
University of Nevada Las Vegas
thomaspadilla.org

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