January 12, 2009 (Radio Actualities)
SEALASKA HERITAGE INSTITUTE’S ARCHIVAL COLLECTIONS, BOOKS, GO
ONLINE
Sealaska Heritage Institute (SHI) has posted a
searchable catalog of its archival collections on the Internet, a
major breakthrough that will help researchers easily sort out what types
of materials the institute houses.
The institute also has just started to add its book collection to the
local
library consortium’s searchable database, making it the only private
library to do so. The projects are part of an effort to foster greater
scholarship on the Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian cultures of Southeast
Alaska, said SHI Archivist Zachary Jones.
“There’s a lot of
opportunity for study because some aspects are unstudied. I think there
are a lot of dated studies that need to be revised, and it’s only by
looking at these fresh sources that people can get the information to
rewrite history,” Jones said.
Before the archival catalog went online, people had to physically go
to the institute’s Special Collections Research Center in Juneau to
peruse it. The change, funded by a grant from the Institute of Museum
and Library Services, allows people to search and view the catalog on
the Internet.
“People can do a
keyword search, they can search by topic, they can browse search, they
can do a handful of different things, they can just look at things by
genre, say they wanted to look at what recordings we had, they could
look at all the recordings,” said Jones.
The holdings include approximately 25,000 photographs, roughly 1,000
cultural objects, nearly 2,500 media items, thousands of books and more
than 1,000 linear feet of manuscript material that document the history,
culture, heritage and language of the Tlignit, Haida and Tsimshian.
The institute also is adding a catalog of its book collection to the
Capital City
Libraries Information Center (CCLIC), so Sealaska Heritage Institute
will show up as a facility that has particular books when people search
the CCLIC system.
“We
have around 3,000 publications. They date from the late 1800s to the
present and they all focus on Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian or Northwest
Coast studies in general,” said Jones.
The catalogs will produce lists of the institute’s holdings. Patrons
still will have to go the Special Collections Research Center to view
the materials and books. The center is located at Sealaska Heritage
Institute at Sealaska Plaza. The center is open 8:15 am-4:15 pm weekdays
(closed from noon-1pm). The database links are posted at
www.sealaskaheritage.org/collection/research.htm
SHI is a Native nonprofit established in 1980 to administer
educational and cultural programs for Sealaska, a regional Native
corporation formed under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act. The
institute’s mission is to perpetuate and enhance Tlingit, Haida and
Tsimshian cultures. Language revitalization is a priority of SHI.
CONTACT: Zachary Jones, SHI Archivist, 907-586-9261
Radio Actualities
- Zachary Jones,
SHI Archivist, TRT: :14 “People can do a keyword search, they can
search by topic, they can browse search, they can do a handful of
different things, they can just look at things by genre, say they
wanted to look at what recordings we had, they could look at all the
recordings.” (mpeg)
(wav)
- Zachary Jones,
SHI Archivist, TRT: :15 "There’s a lot of opportunity for study
because some aspects are unstudied. I think there are a lot of dated
studies that need to be revised, and it’s only by looking at these
fresh sources that people can get the information to rewrite history.”
(mpeg)
(wav)
- Zachary
Jones, SHI Archivist, TRT: :11 “We have
around 3,000 publications. They date from the late 1800s to the
present and they all focus on Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian or
Northwest Coast studies in general.”
(mpeg)
(wav)