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University of California, Los Angeles
Graduate School of Education and Information Studies
Department of Information Studies
in partnership with
School of Theater, Film, and Television
Department of Film, Television, and Digital Media
and
Film & Television Archive
M.A. Program in Moving Image Archive Studies (MIAS)
Assistant/Associate Professor of Audiovisual Archival Studies
The Department of Information Studies in the Graduate School of Education and Information Studies
at UCLA, in partnership with the Department of Film, Television, and Digital Media in UCLA’s
School of Theater, Film, and Television, and with the UCLA Film & Television Archive, invites
applications for a tenure-track assistant professor or tenured associate professor specializing in
audiovisual archival studies. The successful applicant will have research and teaching interests that
relate to any aspect of audiovisual archival studies, broadly conceived as encompassing moving
image, recorded sound, and digital media archives. These interests might include one or more of the
following:
• the nature, history, and role in society, of physical and digital collections of archival moving
images, sound recordings, and new media objects;
• the nature, history, and role in society, of media and technologies for the production,
transmission, organization, discovery, retrieval, presentation, and playback of audiovisual
works;
• uses and users of audiovisual archives;
• the appraisal, description, arrangement, documentation, curatorship, conservation, restoration,
preservation, and exhibition of audiovisual archival resources, and of textual, visual, and
material artifacts relating to such resources;
• the design, evaluation, and use of collections, records, data/metadata, and digital/media asset
management systems for audiovisual archival resources;
• public programming and outreach in audiovisual archives;
• the provision of equitable and open access to audiovisual cultural heritage;
• community, ethnic, and Indigenous audiovisual archives and memory-keeping traditions;
• the management of audiovisual archives in commercial (e.g., studio) and nonprofit (e.g.,
library special collections, museum) settings;
• policy development and analysis for audiovisual archives;
• the evolving identity of the moving image and recorded sound archivists’ professions;
• social, economic, political, and legal aspects of audiovisual archives management; and
• international collaboration, policymaking, and standards development for audiovisual
archives.
The Graduate School of Education and Information Studies (GSE&IS) is one of the top-ranked
schools in the U.S., and supports internationally recognized research centers including the Center for
Information as Evidence. Within the school, the Department of Information Studies (IS) has emerged
as an innovative, interdisciplinary locus for theory and research in information studies, including
archival and museum informatics, data curatorship, information policy, new media, preservation, and
textual and visual studies. The IS Department’s faculty has been recognized as among the most
productive and highly-cited in the field. Faculty members have close ties, not only with the
Department of Film, Television, and Digital Media (FTVDM) and the Film & Television Archive
(FTVA), but also with UCLA’s Center for Digital Humanities, Ethnomusicology Archive, Library
Digital Collections, and Library Special Collections.
The IS Department offers an M.A. program in Moving Image Archive Studies (MIAS; in partnership
with the FTVDM Department and the FTV Archive), an M.L.I.S. (Master of Library and Information
Science) degree with specializations in archival studies, library studies, informatics, and rare books
and print and visual culture, and a Ph.D. program in Information Studies. The MIAS M.A. program
was established in 2002 as the first graduate program in North America (and still the only one on the
West Coast) to address the technical, cultural, and policy challenges of preserving moving image
cultural heritage (film, video, and digital) through a systematic program for preparing future moving
image archivists to lead the field. The archival studies specialization of the M.L.I.S. program is
among the most highly regarded nationally and internationally, and a leader in initiatives to pluralize
archival practice and research.
All faculty in the Department teach at both master’s and doctoral levels; thus, candidates should be
able to demonstrate how their research and teaching interests and experience will help foster the
growth of the M.A., M.L.I.S., and Ph.D. programs. This position entails: teaching four four-unit
courses (including at least two of the core seminars in the MIAS M.A. program) per year, or their
equivalent, in accordance with the Department’s workload policy; advising and mentoring graduate
students; actively engaging in research; and actively participating in administrative responsibilities for
the Department, the School, and the University.
The School and the Department have strong commitments to the rich and varied multicultural
communities of the Southern California region, and a reputation for merging research and practice in
statewide, national, and international outreach and service. We seek a scholar who will make the most
of Los Angeles’ unique advantages as a setting for research that links audiovisual archival studies to
public engagement, and for creating international connections, especially with the Pacific Rim and
Latin America. We particularly encourage applications from those whose research and teaching
address the practices, perspectives, and needs of diverse populations.
Rank: Assistant Professor or Associate Professor.
Starting date: July 1, 2014. (Teaching duties begin late September 2014.) This position is contingent
upon final budgetary approval.
Qualifications: A Ph.D. or other terminal degree; a research agenda; a publication record (or
demonstrable potential for such); established teaching competence; ability to secure grant funding.
Salary: Commensurate with qualifications and experience. UCLA also has an attractive benefits
package.
To apply: Online applications only. Please apply online at
https://recruit.apo.ucla.edu/apply/JPF00107 with a letter of application outlining scholarly
background as well as current and future research plans; a curriculum vitae; samples of publications;
and (optionally) a statement addressing your contributions to diversity through research, teaching,
and/or service. Please also have at least three confidential letters of recommendation.
For informal inquiries, please contact Jonathan Furner, chair of the search committee, at
[log in to unmask], or Snowden Becker, MIAS program manager, at [log in to unmask]
Application deadline: Review of applications will begin on November 29, 2013. To ensure full
consideration, applications should be complete and letters of recommendation received by this date.
The position will remain open until filled, but not later than June 30, 2014.
The University of California, Los Angeles is an Affirmative Action / Equal Employment Opportunity
Employer, committed to excellence through diversity. We encourage applications from members of
underrepresented groups.
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Suellen Coleman
Management Services Officer
Graduate School of Education & Information Studies
[log in to unmask]