OpenMethods

OpenMethods

HIGHLIGHTING DIGITAL HUMANITIES METHODS AND TOOLS

Menu
Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
  • Who we are
    • Editorial Team
    • Volunteer Editors
  • Join us
  • Submit a content
  • Log in
  • Evaluation criteria
  • Posted on September 18, 2017November 9, 2017
  • by Delphine Montoliu

Présentation de TELEMETA, un outil de traitement des archives sonores de la recherche

https://openmethods.dariah.eu/2017/09/18/josephine-simonnot-presentation-de-telemeta-un-outil-de-traitement-des-archives-sonores-de-la-recherche-le-document-sonore/ OpenMethods introduction to: Présentation de TELEMETA, un outil de traitement des archives sonores de la recherche 2017-09-18 13:09:47 Introduction: This conference report highlights a tool for preservation and research process of oral archives. Delphine Montoliu http://sonore.hypotheses.org/117 Blog post Analysis Annotating Archiving Artifacts Bibliographic Listings Capture Cluster Analysis Code Collaboration Community Building Concordancing Content Analysis Creation Data Dissemination Durable Persistent Media Enrichment File French Georeferencing Give Overview Identifying Images Interaction Interpretation Language Linked open data Map Meta-Activities Metadata Multimedia Named Entities Named Entity Recognition Persons Preservation Preservation Metadata Publishing Recording Replication Research Activities Research Objects Research Process Research Techniques Scanning Searching Sharing Sound Storage Technology Preservation Text Tools Transcription Video Virtual Research Environments Visualization Web development Writing via bookmarklet

Introduction by OpenMethods Editor (Delphine Montoliu): This conference report highlights a tool for preservation and research process of oral archives.

Joséphine Simonnot,  ingénieur de recherche au Centre de Recherche en Ethnomusicologie (CREM), nous a présenté les fonctionnalités de la plateforme TELEMETA et le patient parcours de travail préalable à sa mise en production. Cette aventure, tant humaine que technique, remonte 12 ans en arrière lorsque Joséphine Simonnot se voit confier la responsabilité de valoriser un véritable trésor : le fonds d’archives sonores du Musée de l’Homme qui regroupe plus de 5000 collections de musique du monde et de documents sonores, notamment collectés au cours des premières grandes missions scientifiques telles que Dakar-Djibouti (1932) ou Ogooué-Congo (1946). Mais voilà, ce trésor repose sur des supports d’enregistrement variés, en majorité constitué de bandes magnétiques menacées par la décomposition chimique et l’oubli.

 

Comment donc assurer la conservation de ce patrimoine culturel immatériel ? Comment le rendre accessible à la communauté scientifique, ainsi qu’aux populations d’origine qui le réclament ?

 

Original publication date: 16/01/2012.

Source: Joséphine Simonnot : « Présentation de TELEMETA, un outil de traitement des archives sonores de la recherche. » – le document sonore

Share this:

  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
Posted in Analysis, Annotating, Archiving, Artifacts, Bibliographic Listings, Capture, Cluster Analysis, Code, Collaboration, Community Building, Concordancing, Content Analysis, Creation, Data, Dissemination, Durable Persistent Media, Enrichment, File, French, Georeferencing, Give Overview, Identifying, Images, Interaction, Interpretation, Language, Languages, Linked open data, Map, Meta-Activities, Metadata, Multimedia, Named Entities, Named Entity Recognition, Persons, Preservation, Preservation Metadata, Publishing, Recording, Replication, Research Activities, Research Objects, Research Process, Research Techniques, Scanning, Searching, Sharing, Sound, Storage, Technology Preservation, Text, Tools, Transcription, Video, Virtual Research Environments, Visualization, Web development, WritingTagged via bookmarklet

Post navigation

Prev Un nouveau corpus, un peu d’XSLT et la transdisciplinarité
Next N-grams et identification des auteurs

logo_isidoreIsidore suggestions

    Interested in blogging about your research? The Digital Humanities Tools and Methods blog is for you!

    In cooperation with

    OPERAS

    Categories

    Recent Posts

    • Spanish Paleography Digital Teaching and Learning Tool
    • Mediate: A Collaborative Time-Based Media Annotation Tool for the Web
    • An Engaging Environment for Ancient Chinese Texts: An Introduction to ctext.org
    • Closing the Gap in Non-Latin-Script Data: A tool for building and navigating collections of DH research projects
    • “Multilingual Research Projects: Non-Latin Script Challenges for Making Use of Standards, Authority Files, and Character Recognition”.

    Archives

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org
    OpenMethods © 2017-2018.
    All site content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a CC BY license. This is in line with DARIAH’s Open Access Policy
    Privacy Notice
    Hosted by – We use
    HaS received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 675570
    Bezel Theme by SimpleFreeThemes ⋅ Powered by WordPress