Supply and Demand:
Special Collections and Digitisation

Ricky Erway
RLG Program Officer, OCLC Programs and Research
777 Mariners Island Blvd. Suite 550, San Mateo, CA 94404, USA
erwayr@oclc.org

Based on a powerpoint presentation at the LIBER preconference: Discovery to Delivery — A European Resource Discovery Space?, which is available at http://www.ku.edu.tr/ku/images/LIBER/erwaylibercomp.ppt.; © OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc.

Abstract

Based on the outcome of an RLG event entitled ‘Digitisation Matters’, the author presents a number of thought-provoking and sometimes provocative ideas to make more of libraries’ special collections available on the web, stressing access and quantity as key factors.

Key Words:
Digitisation; special collections; research libraries

I have been involved in a number of digitisation initiatives since the late 1980s all dealing with special collections. In each case, preservation was a key objective. Appropriately then, we would identify the highest quality standards feasible at the time and adhere to them, assuming that we were only going to get one chance to digitise, so we’d better get it right.

Since then, I have come to think that digitising special collections for preservation no longer makes sense.

The careful, high-quality capture projects that I and others worked on over the last twenty years resulted in some delightful digital collections. But collectively, our efforts were not making an impact. Innovative at the time, our gorgeous, expensive, hand-crafted websites attracted very few users. Times are changing and we need to keep up.

Google has completely changed the way we think about digitisation of books. We considered books the hardest part of library digitisation (with their sequence and hierarchy, hundreds of images, illustrations, and text conversion) — we did not imagine we would ever digitise all the books. But by focusing on quantity over quality, Google has made the seemingly impossible appear quite doable. And users are swarming. Google supplied — and changed demand.

Now, with millions of books flying off the shelves and ‘into the flow’, we need to change the way we think about digitisation of special collections. Soon students will only search online — what is not there, will not be considered.

Richard Ovenden, Keeper of Special Collections at the Bodleian Library at Oxford, says that when institutions are thinking about their priorities, one of the main drivers in this age of increasingly ubiquitous access to electronic information is going to be what makes their institutions stand out — what makes them unique.[1] He, and I, contend that that is our special collections.

As we increasingly share a collective collection of books, it is the special collections that will distinguish our institutions. Yet ironically, special collections run the risk of being marginalised. If they are not accessible, they are not used; if they are not used, they may go away. Neglect can lead to obsolescence.

Manuscripts, archives, ephemera, photographs, postcards, scrapbooks, clippings files, maps, architectural records — so many of our special collections are hidden, unprocessed in boxes in warehouses. No one knows what's there.

While unprocessed materials in special collections are absolutely hidden from view, even processed materials can be hidden. Our first order of business is to describe these collections, but then we must push those descriptions to the surface of the web where they can be discovered. No one is demanding to look in our supply rooms, as they have no idea what is there. Do we keep those treasures hidden or push them into the light of day? Describing them is just the start.

The Research Libraries Group (RLG) held an event in September 2007, called Digitisation Matters, to discuss ways to increase the scale of digitisation of special collections. We challenged our speakers to make very provocative suggestions.[2] The audience, of over 200 people, discussed the relative merits of the proposals and Jennifer Schaffner and I wrote the Shifting Gears essay,[3] based on the outcomes of that event.

This paper will highlight some of those ideas. They do not all make sense in every situation, but some of them will be applicable for most collections. The second part of the paper provides examples of places where the principles are being put into practice.

Due to their very specialness, we are committed to preserving the originals in our special collections. Why then must we approach digitisation from a preservation point of view? Of course, there are exceptions (like brittle books where we may, in fact, only get one chance to reformat them), but in the main, our digitisation should be in service to increased access. By increasing access we increase the perceived value of our collections. If we fail to make our collections better known, we may no longer have sufficient funds to, or even be employed to, continue collecting and preserving originals for our collections.

Here are some of the provocative recommendations that came out of the Digitisation Matters discussions:

Those are some of the provocative proposals. The following are some promising signs from the community. These were not necessarily influenced by Shifting Gears (in fact many predate it), but they exemplify the recommendations in an encouraging way:

None of this suggests that we discourage access to the originals in our collections. Tony Grafton, in a November New Yorker article[24], talks about the two paths that scholars will want to travel, the digital and the paper-based. Special collections need to digitise with an eye to access, so that our materials, so important and necessary for scholarship, will be visible. We must increase the discoverability of more of our collections in the online environment. If more researchers know about them, more people will come to use the original collections in our institutions. We will be ensuring we have the supply to meet the increased demand.

I think the demand is an exciting challenge and I think our supply is fabulous. I would like to see us move quickly to seize the opportunity to connect them.


Notes

Ovenden, Richard. ‘Special Collections in the next 10 years’ presented at the CURL Research Support Task Force meeting, ‘Special Collections: The Way Forward’ at the Wellcome Collection. February 5, 2008.

Digitsation Matters speakers: Susan Chun, Cultural Heritage Consultant (talk presented by Michael Jenkins, Metropolitan Museum of Art); Sam Quigley, Vice President for Collections Management, Imaging & Information Technology/ Museum CIO Art Institute of Chicago; Barbara Taranto, Director, Digital Library Program, New York Public Library; Sharon Farb, Director, Digital Collections Services, UCLA; Bill Landis, Head of Arrangement and Description & Metadata Coordinator, Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library; James Eason, Principal Archivist for Pictorial Collections, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley; James Hastings, Director, Access Programs, NARA [Mr. Hastings was unable to attend the conference, so Ricky Erway, Program Officer, OCLC Programs and Research, spoke in his stead.] For more information (and recordings) see www.oclc.org/programs/events/2007-08-29.htm

Erway, Ricky, and Jennifer Schaffner (2007). Shifting Gears: Gearing Up to Get Into the Flow. Report produced by OCLC Programs and Research. Published online at: <www.oclc.org/programs/publications/reports/2007-02.pdf>.

Dempsey, Lorcan. ‘The Special Web.’ Lorcan Dempsey's weblog. October 21, 2007. [blog <orweblog.oclc.org/archives/001461.html>.

Information Architects Japan. Web Trend Map 2008 Beta. http://informationarchitects.jp/web-trend-map-2008-beta/

The University of Texas at Austin, Harry Ransom Center, Using the Ransom Center Collections, <www.hrc.utexas.edu/research/info/>.

Ranger, Joshua. ‘More Bytes, Less Bite: Cutting Corners in Digitization.’ MAC Fall Symposium. October 7, 2006.’ <www.midwestarchives.org/2006_Fall/presentations/Ranger%20Omahapresentationranger.doc>.

The Smithsonian Institution, Smithsonian Archives of American Art, Collections Online, Primary Sources on American Art and Artists.<www.aaa.si.edu/collectionsonline/>.

European Commission, Information Society. i2010: European Digital Libraries Initiative, ‘Europe's cultural and scientific heritage at a click of a mouse’.<http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities/digital_libraries/index_en.htm>.

University of North Carolina, Carolina Digital Library and Archives, CDLA Projects. <cdla.unc.edu/index.html>.

University of North Carolina, A View to Hugh: Processing the Hugh Morton Photographs and Films. [blog] <www.lib.unc.edu/blogs/morton/>.

Gillesse, Robert, Judith Rog, Astrid Verheusen. Alternative File Formats for Storing Masters 2.0.doc. Koninklijke Bibliotheek/National Library of the Netherlands, Research and Development Department. March 7, 2008. <www.kb.nl/hrd/dd/dd_links_en_publicaties/publicaties/Alternative%20File%20Formats%20for%20Storing%20Masters%202 1.pdf>.

The National Archives, National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC). Grant Announcement: Digitizing Historical Records. <www.archives.gov/nhprc/announcement/digitizing.html>.

Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR), Current CLIR Activities, Cataloging Hidden Special Collections and Archives: Building a New Research Environment (2008) <www.clir.org/hiddencollections/index.html>.

The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation). ‘Practical Guidelines for the Cultural Heritage Funding Programme. 03/07. <www.dfg.de/forschungsfoerderung/formulare/download/12_151e.pdf>.

Kaufman, Peter B., and Jeff Ubois. ‘Good Terms - Improving Commercial-Noncommercial Partnerships for Mass Digitization.’ D-Lib Magazine. November/December 2007. <dlib.org/dlib/november07/kaufman/11kaufman.html>.

European Commission Information Society. i2010 European Digital Libraries Initiative. High Level Expert Group on Digital Libraries Sub-group on Public Private Partnerships ‘Final Report on Public Private Partnerships for the Digitisation and Online Accessibility of Europe's Cultural Heritage.’ May 2008. <http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities/digital_libraries/doc/hleg/reports/ppp/ppp_final.pdf>

The National Archives. ‘Draft Nara Digitizing Plan Available For Public Comment.’ September 10, 2007. <www.archives.gov/comment/digitizing-plan.html>.

United Kingdom Serials Group (UKSG). Live Serials. ‘Mass digitisation of historical records for access and preservation - Dan Jones, Head of Business Development, National Archives’ April 2008. <liveserials.blogspot.com/2008/04/mass-digitisation-of-historical-records.html>.

Emory Libraries. An Overview of the Five Year Strategy for the Emory Libraries <web.library.emory.edu/about/publications/Five_Year_Strategy_2007.html>.

Europeana Press Release: These boots were made for...’ European Digital Library Foundation. The European Library. Feb 2008. <www.theeuropeanlibrary.org/portal/organisation/press/documents/Europeana_Feb08_press_release_Final.doc>.

flickr. The Commons: Your opportunity to contribute to describing the world's public photo collections.<http://www.flickr.com/commons>.

National & State Libraries Australasia (NSLA). ‘The Big Bang: Creating the new library universe.’ June 2007.<http://www.nsla.org.au/publications/papers/2007/pdf/NSLA.Discussion-Paper-20070629-The.Big.Bang..creating.the.new.library.universe.pdf>.

Grafton, Anthony. ‘Future Reading: Digitization and its discontents.’ The New Yorker. November 5, 2007. <http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/11/05/071105fa_fact_grafton>.