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Guiding Principles for Description

January 11, 2021 Amy McDonald

by Meghan Lyon, Head of Technical Services

The “Duke University Libraries Statement of Our Commitment” (issued in June 2020) commits Duke Libraries to expanding cultural competence and combatting racism. One of the statement’s five goals is to “Practice more inclusive metadata creation, with the goal of harm reduction from biased and alienating description and classification.”

Creating “Guiding Principles” for RL Technical Services

The Rubenstein Library Technical Services Department (RLTS) has been seeking to create “inclusive metadata” for much longer than the summer of 2020. But we were inspired by Duke Libraries’ “Statement of Our Commitment” to more formally and concretely define what “inclusive metadata” means. We began this process by collecting and reading library and community literature, listening to panels and presentations on these topics, and researching what our peers and role models are doing. Our staff met and workshopped a draft of new “Guiding Principles for Description,” which was subsequently edited and adopted by the department and is now available here (along with links to further reading).

Developing these guiding principles is only one part of our ongoing commitment to create inclusive description for Rubenstein Library materials. RLTS processes and catalogs a wide range of special collection formats (printed books, serials, ephemera, zines, archival papers, institutional records, film, video, born digital files, objects, and more) and creates description that is shared across a variety of platforms, such as the library catalog, finding aid database, and Duke’s institutional repository. Going forward, we hope the “Guiding Principles for Description” will serve as the foundation for any type of description created or managed by Rubenstein’s catalogers and archivists.

Current and Future Inclusive Description Projects

The Rubenstein's copy of The Narrative of Sojourner Truth (1850), opened to the title page and frontispiece with engraving of the author.
The Narrative of Sojourner Truth, 1850. As part of their work to catalog the Lisa Unger Baskin Collection, Rubenstein catalogers corrected a century-long misattribution of authorship in the Library of Congress Name Authority File, returning credit back to Sojourner Truth.

There is much work already underway across Duke Libraries, and much more planned as Rubenstein Technical Services continues to prioritize the creation of inclusive description. Some of these projects pre-date the coining of our “Guiding Principles” — for example, we are proud of the ongoing cataloging of the thousands of items in the Lisa Unger Baskin Collection, where catalogers are creating name authority records and detailed provenance notes tracing the often hidden role of women in printing, publishing, and book-binding. When developing ArcLight, our finding aid interface (launched in July), an important feature was the addition of a feedback button to encourage suggestions, particularly if a user spots harmful or incorrect descriptive language in our metadata. With the recent addition of a new Filmfabriek HDS+ film scanner, RLTS has launched a new film preservation program. One of the first projects on the scanner was the Civil Rights-era film Ivanhoe Donaldson, digitized in support of the SNCC Digital Gateway project. You can read more about the preservation of this important film here.

Our projects have continued this fall despite the COVID-19 pandemic. While working remotely, the Rare Materials Section has prioritized creating new manuscript catalog records for the Rubenstein’s American Slavery Documents, which will mean better discovery and access to the names and histories of Black people who were enslaved and emancipated in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

A handwritten half sheet of paper reading "This is to certify that Nancy Gardner a mulatto girl aged twenty years, was born free of a free mother, & is therefore to all intents & purposes a free woman. Given under my hand this 30th day of Nov, 1806. J. Walker"
Free papers for Nancy Gardner, 1806. Catalogers are creating new description for manuscripts like this from the American Slavery Documents collection, along with creating name authority records that align with our new “Guiding Principles for Description.”

Our Archival Processing Section has begun reviewing manuscript collections with outdated, inadequate, or offensive description, and they will be reprocessing, re-describing, and exploring how to be transparent about any changes or updates they make through development of a new style guide for finding aids. This includes finding and correcting our library’s past descriptive decisions or mistakes. This is a long-term commitment—we have tens of thousands of collections!—but we have already gotten started. One example is described here, where a diary recently added to the Appleton Oaksmith Papers led to new subject headings in the collection’s description, plus an edited biographical note clarifying Oaksmith’s occupation as a slave trader. Across the department, we intend to ramp up reparative description projects, particularly for our nineteenth-century Southern white family papers, because we know that the records of enslavers may be the only remaining documentation of those who were enslaved. We are seeking marginalized, hidden, and silenced voices. Even in their silences, our collections have much to say. Please stay tuned, and stay in touch, as we pursue this important work.




Related posts:

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New Collection Spans Five Centuries of Women's History

New Acquisitions Roundup: Trinity College female basketball player poster

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The Devil’s Tale Archive

RSS New Archival Collections at the Rubenstein Library

  • Alfred M. and John A. Foster papers, 1801-1919., bulk 1840-1890.
  • The Graduate School Newsletter [serial], 1990-1999.
  • Logbook for ships Immortalité and Flying Fish, 1872-1876 : autograph manuscript.
  • Sanders family papers, 1806-1929.
  • Robert L. Lawrence papers, 1950-2005.

RSS New Books and Other Publications at the Rubenstein Library

  • Histoire des plantes qui naissent aux environs de Paris : avec leur usage dans la médecine / par M. Pitton Tournefort, de l'Académie royale des sciences, docteur en médecine de la Faculté de Paris & professeur en botanique au Jardin royal des plantes.
  • Про збільшення виробництва продуктів тваринництва : доповідь на Пленумі Центрального комітету КПРС 25 січня 1955 року / Pro zbilʹshenni︠a︡ vyrobnyt︠s︡tva produktiv tvarynnyt︠s︡tva : dopovidʹ na Plenumi T︠S︡entralʹnoho komitetu KPRS 25 sichni︠a︡ 1955 roku / М.С. Хрущов. / M.S. Khrushchov.
  • Про мізгнародне становіще і зовнішню політику уряду СРСР : доповідь на другій сесії Верховної ради СРСР четвертого скликання 8 лютого 1955 р. / Pro mizhnarodne stanovishche i zovnishni︠u︡ polityku uri︠a︡du SRSR : dopovidʹ na druhiĭ sesiï Verkhovnoï rady SRSR chetvertoho sklykanni︠a︡ 8 li︠u︡toho 1955 r. / В.М. Молотов. / V.M. Molotov.
  • Промова на другій сесії Верховної ради СРСР, четвертого скликання, 9. лютого 1955 року / Promova na druhiĭ sesiï Verkhovnoï rady SRSR, chetvertoho sklykanni︠a︡, 9. li︠u︡toho 1955 roku / М.О. Булганін. / M.O. Bulhanin.
  • The State Convict Road Force and the state press : paragraphs and photographs / compiled by R.M. Johnson.

RSS New Rubenstein Library Materials Added to the Internet Archive

  • The housekeeper's oracle, or, Art of domestic management : containing a complete system of carving with accuracy and elegance : hints relative to dinner parties : the art of managing servants : and the economist and epicure's calendar ... 1829 July 1, 2025
  • Canzoniere sacro di Giuda Levita / tradotto dall'ebraico ed illustrato da Salvatore De Benedetti ; con introduzione. (Volume c.1) June 25, 2025
  • Pirke Abot = Sayings of the fathers / Yiddish translations by Yehoash ; English translation revised by B. Halper. (Volume c.1) June 25, 2025
  • Sefer Torah, Neviʼim u-Khetuvim : meduyaḳ heṭev ʻal pi ha-masorah hugah be-'iyun nimrats / 'al yede He-ḥakham ha-muvhak Me'ir ha-Levi Leteris. (Volume c.1) June 25, 2025
  • Pirḳe Rabi Eliʻezer ha-gadol : ʻim beʾur ha-Radal / ...hugah ʻal yede Shemuʾel [ben] Eliʻezer Lurya. (Volume c.1) June 25, 2025

Learn more about our commitment to inclusive description of library collections.


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