KvinnSam

KvinnSam - National Resource Library for Gender Studies, formerly the Women's History Collections, is the Swedish National Resource Library for Gender Studies. The collections belong to Gothenburg University Library.

History

The Kvinnohistoriskt arkiv (Women's History Archive) was established in 1958 by two librarians who were working at the Gothenburg City Library, Asta Ekenvall and Rosa Malmström, along with the chair of the Fredrika Bremer Association in Gothenburg, Eva Pinéus. Established as a self-supporting, private archive the women hoped to preserve archival materials, create and maintain a record of current research into women's history, and provide a publishing mechanism for materials on women's history and issues. Ekenvall contacted prominent women throughout Sweden asking them to donate materials for the archive and some of her earliest acquisitions included letters and diaries by Barbro Alving, Emilia Fogelklou, Åsa Moberg and Elin Wägner, among others. The first publication produced by the Archive was Malmström's Kvinnliga präster, bibliografi över i Sverige tryckt litteratur (Female Priests, bibliography of literature printed in Sweden, 1958).[1][2] In 1972, Ekenvall, who at the time was chief librarian at the Gothenburg University Library, transferred the archive into the care of Gothenburg University. The university renamed the collection the Kvinnohistoriska samlingarna (Women's History Collections)[3] and hired a half-time librarian to manage the records.[1]

Since 2010, the KvinnSam has been called the National National Library for Gender Research and is the largest collection of gender-related research in the Nordic countries. Five full-time librarians work to manage the collection, preserving and digitizing archival materials.[1] The library collects and organizes material on gender issues. This includes everything from academic theses to small leaflets and debate articles. The collections also comprise a manuscript collection with texts and photographs. Parts of these have been digitized and are now freely available on the Internet. A wide range of women's journals, from the 19th century onwards, are also digitized.

KvinnSam produces four databases:

  • KVINNSAM is the largest database on gender research in the Nordic countries. It contains more than 140,000 items[4]
  • GENA (GENusAvhandlingar) is a database of PhD-theses in Women's Studies, Men's Studies and Gender Research in Sweden, from 1960 onwards.
  • GREDA (Gender Researchers Database) contains presentations of Swedish gender researchers.
  • JÄMDA (Jämställdhetsdatabasen) is the newest database, launched in December 2009. It contains literature about gender mainstreaming and also about gender equality in a wider sense.

GENA, GREDA and JÄMDA have all been developed in collaboration with the Swedish National Secretariat for Gender Research.

The references in the databases are indexed with keywords chosen from a special list, in which the gender aspect is implicit. The keyword “journalists” implies female journalists, for male journalists you write “journalists: men”.

gollark: I'd be *interested* in brain-computer-interface stuff, but it'll probably be a while before it develops into something useful and the security implications are very ææææaa.
gollark: It's still stupid. If the data is *there*, you can read it, no way around that.
gollark: This is something where you could probably make it actually-secure-ish through asymmetric cryptography, but just using a symmetric algorithm and hoping nobody will ever dump the keys is moronically stupid.
gollark: Indeed.
gollark: It seems like one of those things which can never actually work as long as someone cares enough to break it.

References

  1. Ramnehill, Maria (24 October 2018). "Unikt arkiv firar 60 år" [Unique archive celebrates 60 years]. Feministiskt Perspektiv (in Swedish). Stockholm, Sweden. ISSN 2002-1542. Retrieved 20 April 2019.
  2. Sjöberg, Maria; Grosjean, Alexia (Translator) (2018). "Astrid Märta (Asta) Ekenvall". skbl.se. University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden: Svenskt kvinnobiografiskt lexikon. Archived from the original on 19 April 2019. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
  3. Dahl, Eva-Lena (2003). "Asta Ekenvall (1913–2001)". In Hallberg, Paul (ed.). Kungliga Vetenskaps- och Vitterhets-Samhället i Göteborg: Minnestal hållna på högtidsdagarna 2001–2003 (PDF) (in Swedish). Gothenburg, Sweden: Rundqvists Boktryckeri. p. 90. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 August 2017.
  4. The Database KVINNSAM
  • KvinnSam - National Resource Library for Gender Studies
  • Swedish National Secretariat for Gender Studies
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.