Toronto Metropolitan University
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Identity Information in Object-Level Descriptions: Towards Inclusive Cataloguing Contemporary Photography

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posted on 2025-02-06, 21:19 authored by Maria Kanellopoulos

This research follows an epistemological questioning among archival practitioners who are challenging methods of historical recordkeeping. The National Gallery of Canada’s contemporary photography holdings serve as a case study to question what information is deemed necessary in records documentation and the ways that information reaches the archive. I propose including self-disclosed object-maker identity information in museum databases to better contextualize, and enable the interpretation of collection objects and allow more accurate representation of artists and makers. Self-disclosed identity information shifts knowledge production away from the institution to the object-maker, decentering information and power structures away from collecting institutions. This study presents the Inclusive Cataloguing Toolkit as a practical solution. Its creation and implementation is inspired by contemporary archival documentation practices such as participatory description, archival autonomy, and record co-creation that relocate information, knowledge, and power structures to bridge the needs of inclusive cataloguing and provide a framework for future change.

History

Language

English

Degree

  • Master of Arts

Program

  • Film and Photography Preservation and Collections Management

Granting Institution

Ryerson University

LAC Thesis Type

  • Thesis

Thesis Advisor

Kristen Adlhoch / Marc Boulay / Heather Courtney

Year

2022

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    Film and Photography Preservation and Collections Management (Theses)

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