Creating a Professional Training Program and Research Initiative on the Study of the Black Web, Archiving the Black Web (ATBW) Receives $2.5 Million Grant From the Mellon Foundation
Archiving the Black Web (ATBW), co-developed by Makiba Foster, librarian of The College of Wooster and Bergis Jules, an archivist and a founding member of Shift Collective, has been awarded a $2.5 million grant from the Mellon Foundation to develop a continuing education training program in web archiving that is aimed at memory workers collecting archival content documenting Black life, history, and culture. In addition, the project will undertake a research initiative with the goals of mapping, describing, and producing scholarship about the Black web. The goal with this phase of ATBW is to diversify and increase the number of web archiving practitioners and collections that focus on the Black experience, as well as bring together scholars and archivists who want to increase understanding, collections, and scholarship about how Black people use digital communication technologies.
ATBW is driven by an urgent call to action to establish a more equitable and accessible web archiving practice to effectively document the Black experience. The expansive growth of the web and social media coupled with the wide use of these platforms by Black people presents significant opportunities and responsibilities for collecting institutions who are interested in documenting Black life and experiences online. Addressing the importance of this collaborative project, ATBW’s Principal Investigator, Makiba Foster states, “The ever-expanding role of the digital space within our daily lives requires memory workers to acquire skills to help them document and preserve this public knowledge. Our work is to create preservation pathways for those committed to documenting Black life as well as uniting with scholars to collaboratively define Black experiences on the web. ATBW’s ability to build a diverse interconnected network of people and organizations is made possible through the support of the Mellon Foundation. This funding enables ATBW to continue the critical work of education, practice, and research related to digital Blackness.”
Work on this grant project will be led by Makiba Foster (The College of Wooster Libraries), Bergis Jules (Shift Collective), and Dr. Meredith Clark (Northeastern University’s Center for Communication, Media Innovation and Social Change). Leading different aspects of the work, key partners representing diverse memory collecting organizations include community-based archives with Yusef Omowale (Southern California Library), public libraries with Derek Mosley (Auburn Avenue Research Library on African American Culture and History), and Historically Black Colleges and Universities with Holly Smith (Spelman College Archives). These organizations and their staff represent who ATBW hopes to impact through this project.
Direct to Archiving the Black Web (ATBW) Website
Filed under: Academic Libraries, Archives and Special Collections, Associations and Organizations, Funding, Libraries, News, Preservation, Public Libraries
About Gary Price
Gary Price (gprice@gmail.com) is a librarian, writer, consultant, and frequent conference speaker based in the Washington D.C. metro area. He earned his MLIS degree from Wayne State University in Detroit. Price has won several awards including the SLA Innovations in Technology Award and Alumnus of the Year from the Wayne St. University Library and Information Science Program. From 2006-2009 he was Director of Online Information Services at Ask.com.