IASA journal No 32, January 2009
Download articles (IASA members only)
- Editorial
- President’s Letter
-
The Contributions of Custodians: Welcoming Remarks and IASA 2009 Conference Launch
Chris Puplick AM, Australian National Film and Sound Archive, Australia -
From Satawal to Cyberspace
Jan Lyall, UNESCO Memory of the World Program -
The Mexican Soundscape Project
Lidia Camacho, Fonoteca Nacional, Mexico -
A Working Model for Developing and Sustaining Collaborative Relationships Between Archival Repositories in the Caribbean and the United States
Bertram Lyons and Rosita M. Sands, Association for Cultural Equity / Alan Lomax Archive, USA -
Archiving Challenges in Africa: The Case of Post-Conflict Liberia
Proscovia Svärd, The Nordic Africa Institute, Uppsala, Sweden -
Our Future’s Past: Indigenous Archival Discovery as a Catalyst for New Recording Initiatives in Remote Northeast Arnhem Land
Aaron Corn, The University of Sydney, Australia -
Islands Archiving
Richard Moyle, Archive of Maori and Pacific Music, University of Auckland, New Zealand -
Regional Archives and Community Portals
Paul Trilsbeek and Dieter van Uytvanck, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, The Netherlands -
The Challenges of Web Access to Archival Oral History in Britain
Rob Perks, Curator of Oral History, British Library Sound Archive, London & Visiting Professor in Oral History, University of Huddersfield -
On the Trail of the Telegraphone
Christian Liebl, Centre for Linguistics and Audiovisual Documentation, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna, Austria -
Play the Un-playable: Tinfoil Recording Recovered by the Sound Archive Project
Nigel Bewley, British Library Sound Archive -
Review: Friedrich Engel, Gerhard Kuper, Frank Bell. Zeitschichten: Magnetbandtechnik als Kulturträger. Erfinder-Biographien und Erfindungen
Reviewed by Albrecht Häfner
