[ANPPOM-Lista] Fwd: New Audiovisual citation guidelines from the British Universities Film & Video Council (BUFVC).

Martha Ulhôa mulhoa em unirio.br
Qua Mar 27 13:49:27 BRT 2013


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Simon Zagorski-Thomas <simonzt em artofrecordproduction.com>
Date: 2013/3/27
Subject: New Audiovisual citation guidelines from the British Universities
Film & Video Council (BUFVC).
To: ASARP em jiscmail.ac.uk


New Audiovisual citation guidelines were published today by the British
Universities Film & Video Council (BUFVC). The guidelines cover film;
television programmes; radio programmes; audio recordings; DVD extras;
clips; trailers; adverts; idents; non broadcast, amateur and archive
material; podcasts; vodcasts and games.

>From the BUFVC presss release *
http://bufvc.ac.uk/2013/03/27/audiovisual-citation-guidelines-launched-today
*<http://bufvc.ac.uk/2013/03/27/audiovisual-citation-guidelines-launched-today>
:

In the era of YouTube, podcasts and vidcasts new pioneering guidelines,
launched today, will be crucial for students, researchers and academics
when they cite moving image and sound sources, or provide advice on
referencing them.

The British Universities Film & Video Council’s (BUFVC) guidelines respond
to the 2011 Jisc report, *Film and Sound in Higher and Further Education: A
Progress Report with Ten Strategic
Recommendations.*<http://filmandsoundthinktank.jisc.ac.uk/>

The report found that despite the exponential increase in the use of
audiovisual material in teaching, learning and research in higher and
further education, existing guidelines for the referencing of moving image
and sound are often insufficient as they are based on standards developed
for the written word. This has the effect of discouraging the citing of
moving image and sound, as well as creating barriers in its discovery, use
and reuse.

Professor John Ellis, professor of media arts, University of London:
“Citation exists so that youcan find the source of any quotation. The rules
have long since been worked out for print sources. However, for moving
image and sound, no one quite knows what to do, so references are usually
imprecise and sometimes left out completely. This guide now makes it
possible for any writer (even a student) to lead their readers to the exact
audiovisual source they are discussing. It might seem a simple problem to
solve, until you realise that there are a multitude of different types of
audiovisual source!”

The guidelines can be downloaded from
*http://bufvc.ac.uk/avcitation/guidelines*<http://bufvc.ac.uk/avcitation/guidelines>

------------------------------------------
Richard Ranft
Head of Sound and Vision,
The British Library,
96 Euston Road,
London NWI 2DB, UK.

email: richard.ranft em bl.uk
voice: +44 (0)20-7412-7424
fax:   +44 (0)20-7412-7441
*www.bl.uk/soundarchive* <http://www.bl.uk/soundarchive>
-------------------------------------------





-- 
Martha Tupinambá de Ulhôa
Instituto Villa Lobos - PPGM - UNIRIO
IASPM - Executive Chair (2011-2013)
http://www.iaspm.net/proceedings/index.php/iaspm2013/IASPM17th

http://lattes.cnpq.br/5378800627543781
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