Preserving Complex Digital Objects

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Category=GLP
cultural heritage
digital humanities
digital preservation
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781856049580
  • Weight: 300g
  • Dimensions: 157 x 236mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Jun 2014
  • Publisher: Facet Publishing
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This ground-breaking edited collection explores the challenges of preserving complex digital objects such as simulations, visualisations, digital art and video games.
Drawing on the outputs of the JISC-funded Preservation of Complex Objects (POCOS) symposia, enhanced with specialist pathfinder solutions, this book will cover topics such as the legal and technical challenges of preservation, curation and authority, and digital archaeology.
Written by international experts from a broad background of library, collecting institutions, information and computer science, and digital preservation backgrounds, this collection showcases the state of the art of the discipline and brings together stakeholder perspectives from across the preservation community. The collection is structured around six parts:

  1. Why and what to preserve: creativity vs preservation
  2. The memory institution: data archival perspectives
  3. Digital preservation approaches, practices and tools
  4. Case studies
  5. A legal perspective
  6. Pathfinder conclusions.

Readership: Academics and students on digital preservation, digital humanities and information management courses, and those working in preservation and collecting for memory institutions will find this a valuable read. It will also be of particular interest to computer scientists, artists, games and emulation communities, archaeologists and digital forensic scientists.

Janet Delve is co-leader of the interdisciplinary Future Proof Computing Group in the School of Creative Technologies at the University of Portsmouth. She is a member of the Digital Preservation Coalition Technology Watch Editorial Board.
David Anderson is co-leader of the interdisciplinary Future Proof Computing Group at the University of Portsmouth. He is the Director of CiTECH (the Centre for Cultural and Industrial Technologies Research) in the Faculty of Creative and Cultural Industries.