Examples of crumbling carbon paper and newspaper clippings: just some of the problematic materials that can slow down the processing of a collection |
In addition to being ecstatic, I was idealistic. I was assigned to process the Moses and Frances Asch Collection, one of the most important in our stacks, and man, I felt AWESOME. This was going to be exciting! The things I would get to touch (with white gloves, of course)! The correspondence I would get to snoop around in! The photos I would discover! Being an archivist was going to be JUST LIKE THE MOVIES!
But as the weeks went by, it became clear that I was completely and utterly overwhelmed. Masters, shmasters--nothing in library school could have prepared me for the odyssey that lay ahead. The boxes I would have to go through seemed to multiply like the lidless Tupperware containers in my kitchen. Paper was crumbling at an alarming rate. I would find materials with no discernible context stuffed in folders with completely unrelated items. Not being psychic, had no idea where they belonged. Sometimes there would be a lead, and I'd follow it until it took me somewhere that made sense. Other times, into the miscellaneous box it would go.
Just as often, however, I would find treasures. Letters and signed first editions from Langston Hughes, typewriter artwork by Harry Smith, photographs of 1960s Kentucky by Jim Garland, impassioned folk music manifestos by Moe Asch. Months passed, and I finally started to see my progress. Beautifully arranged boxes began to emerge out of the chaos. I was getting somewhere. Slowly but surely, I made my way through the collection, folder by folder, box by box.
Little boxes, all the same: Part of the Moses and Frances Asch Collection, now manageable for our beloved researchers |
For more on how archival processing works, see Jennifer O'Neal's earlier post on "The Art of Processing an Archival Collection."
-Cecilia Peterson, Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections
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