‘Just put it online’: the Taylor White project as a digitization case study
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Published:2021-05-12
Issue:4
Volume:75
Page:627-642
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ISSN:0035-9149
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Container-title:Notes and Records: the Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Notes Rec.
Affiliation:
1. 3459 McTavish St, Montreal, Quebec H3A 0C9, Canada
Abstract
Creating access to digital surrogates of primary source materials has spurred the growth of history of science as a field. Enabling and supporting virtual access requires an understanding of the behind-the-scenes requirements of a digitization project. Using McGill's Taylor White Project as a case study, this article reveals how such a project is managed, to result in a unique digital collection that supports research in both the humanities and the sciences. The workflows described transformed a collection of 938 eighteenth-century natural history drawings from a relatively inaccessible archive to a searchable and browsable digital collection, complete with contextualizing interactive visualizations. Understanding this process reveals some of the ways in which digitized data can create new avenues for questioning and examining information.
Funder
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada
Publisher
The Royal Society
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science