
Paper Trails
The Social Life of Archives and Collections
Andrew W. M. Smith (Editor)
Paper Trails brings together a diverse group of people both in its pages and its readership – researchers, practitioners and students – as well as featuring different historical collections (print, object and digital) held in a wide variety of different libraries, museums and archives. Its content is designed to bridge different communities of research and practice. The BOOC format creates a ‘living book’, which is entirely open access and evolves over time, allowing for different formats of pieces to speak in conversation.
The project enables collaboration between sometimes unlikely partners to help break down barriers and to open up the world of historical research. It reveals how the work and methodologies of researchers, academics, education practitioners and students interrelate, providing opportunities for collaborations beyond the usual parameters these fields present.
Paper Trails is organised around four different streams of content, which are:
1. Research Stories: Full-length research articles which encourage a focus on research stories to invite a reflective methodology, offering an inclusive and engaged commentary on the work involved in researching, ordering and preserving the past.
2. Co-production: Outputs from projects in which non-academic, undergraduate and taught postgraduate audiences collaborate with others (collection professions, academics, members of the public, etc.) to create new work that is based on research collections.
3. Collection Profiles: Shorter, descriptive or even narrative pieces that highlight items or collections of interest.
4. Engagement: Reflective pieces that focus on a broad range of engagement activities, from the professional’s perspective. These can be case studies, or ‘think pieces’ on particular skills or techniques.
Paper Trails is organised around different
four streams of content, which are:
- Research Stories: Full length research articles which encourage a focus on research stories to invite a more reflective methodology, offering a more inclusive and engaged commentary on the work involved in researching, ordering, and preserving the past.
- Co-Production: Outputs from projects in which non-academic, undergraduate and taught postgraduate audiences collaborate with others (collection professions, academics, members of the public etc) to create new work that is based on research collections.
- Collection Profiles: Shorter, descriptive or even narrative pieces that highlight items or collections of interest.
- Engagement: Reflective pieces that focus on a broad range of engagement activities, from the professional’s perspective. These can be case studies, or ‘think pieces’ on particular skills or techniques.
DOI: 10.14324/111.444.9781787359253
Publication date: 15 July 2021
Read Online ISBN: 9781787359253
Andrew W. M. Smith (Editor)
Andrew W. M. Smith is Director of Liberal Arts at Queen Mary, University of London.

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