PrefaceIntroductionPart I: Cataloging Technologies and its Influence on the Organization and Description of Information1 The Historical Use of Catalogs in the Arrangement of Knowledge in Libraries, Archives, and Museums: A SurveyPart II: The Transition from Analog to Digital. Web 1.02 Analog to Digital: The Growing Pains of a Religious Archive Migrating its Administrative Collections3 The Theory was Sound: A Case Study in the Lifecycle of a Library Streaming Sound Collection4 Digital Access Enhancement Initiative at the National Music Museum5 Cataloging and Description Practices Informed by Rationale in a Small LAM EnvironmentPart III: Finding Structure. Making Connections. Web 2.06 Digital Archival Representation: Approaches and Challenges7 Linking Items, Connecting Content: The Donald Thomson Collection8 Information Management Systems at the Metropolitan Museum of Art9 Art Information Culture: Contemporary Disruptions in Museums10 How Metadata Informs Purpose: A Case Study of NYPL’s Open Source GIS-Driven MapWarper ToolPart IV: Transition to Web 3.011 Transcribe as Seen: Challenging RDA Regarding Gender in Moving Image Materials12 Cultural Heritage Curriculum Crosswalk: Using Metadata to Connect to Curriculum13 Optimizing Merged Metadata Standards for Online Community History: A Linked Open Data Approach14 Evolution and Revolution in Metadata Librarianship: Identifying New Requirements for Professional Qualifications amid Organizational Change15 Increasing Interoperability through the Transformation and the Consolidation of Image Collections’ Metadata16 Large Scale with a Small Staff and Even Smaller Budget: Updating Metadata to Reflect Revised Best Practices17 Bringing the Archives out of the Art Museum: Local Metadata Planning within a Global Context18 Experiments in High Resolution Imaging for Exhibition and Publication of Historic Fashion: The Drexel Digital Museum ProjectAbout the authorsIndex