AUTHOR=Moss Michael , Thomas David , Gollins Timothy TITLE=Artificial Fibers—The Implications of the Digital for Archival Access JOURNAL=Frontiers in Digital Humanities VOLUME=5 YEAR=2018 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/digital-humanities/articles/10.3389/fdigh.2018.00020 DOI=10.3389/fdigh.2018.00020 ISSN=2297-2668 ABSTRACT=

This article explores how current methods and approaches in archives are under serious challenge because of the changes brought about by the move to the digital. The availability of digital records has meant that new needs and new possibilities have opened up for users, including new ways of reading. The nature of archives themselves are changing—they are moving from being collections of individual texts to be pored over to data to be made sense of. New tools and techniques have emerged and are available now which offer radical new possibilities for research, but these bring new challenges about trust and the sheer volume of records to be handled. The traditional approaches of applying metadata to facilitate the finding of relevant material and of regarding digital documents as something like electronic paper is no long viable. What is needed is a new approach in which archivists and scholarly researchers see archives as collections of data which are capable of analysis by a range of sophisticated tools and which are capable of being interpreted in a range of different ways.