Archive for the 'Online Tools for Scholars' Category

Collaborative LCRM Bibliography

How can we develop our incipient Long Civil Rights Movement bibliography collaboratively online?

The LCRM project team is experimenting with some ways to make the list more interactive.  First, we hope to make each entry a link to a library record and to full text where available online.  We are trying both WorldCat and OpenURL, and each has drawbacks:  WorldCat has a limit of 250 entries in saved lists; OpenURL is dependent upon a fully functioning OpenURL resolver at the user’s home institution.  (It just so happens that at UNC Chapel Hill, the OpenURL resolver seems to work better for articles than for books.)

Second, we are very interested in including notes in the bibliography on who nominated the entry and why.  Recently we started a new LCRM group in Zotero).   Zotero 2.0 (in beta at this time; download available at http://www.zotero.org/) allows some exciting group functionality. Continue reading ‘Collaborative LCRM Bibliography’

Annotating Books Online

While a new, more architecturally sound, more scalable version of our publishing prototype is being developed, the one that we demonstrated at the Digital Publishing Workshop in April is no longer available to be viewed.   It is good news for the LCRM Project that we have received some inquiries about it.  If you are curious to see similar functionality that allows commenting on books, you might take a look at the following:

–Django Book, which provides some of the technical framework for our future offering
http://www.djangobook.com/en/2.0/
–Yale Books Unbound, in partnership with the Institute for the Future of the Book
http://yupnet.org/home/

There are other experiments online with annotating books, but these are two of my favorites.

What appears to be different about the LCRM Project/UNC Press plans in comparison to other experiments with annotation is our emphasis on links to primary and secondary sources, including primary sources that might be provided by the author and digitized by the UNC Library or elsewhere for this purpose.

In other words, sometimes when an author approaches UNC Press with a completed book manuscript, he or she also has in hand a collection of primary sources that informed the book narrative.  Sometimes the author will ask the Press, “Do you want any of these oral history tapes and document files?”  Notwithstanding the rights issues and technological challenges, we would like to be able to say “Yes.”  With the UNC Library fast becoming a major digitization center, there is the possibility of (1) ingesting the pieces that do not reside elsewhere into the Library as a collection; (2) making them available for viewing online; and (3) linking from the online book to the digital collection. Continue reading ‘Annotating Books Online’

Civil Rights Roundup

Recent civil rights news…

Digital Publishing Workshop

Following the Long Civil Rights Movement Conference in April, the “Publishing the Long Civil Rights Movement” project team had the opportunity to discuss digital publishing with the conference panelists in a workshop.  Several members of the staff of the UNC Special Collections Library were also in the audience.  We deeply appreciate the participation of all those who attended—especially considering that a beautiful spring day and ongoing conversations about the conference panels beckoned!  Following are highlights of the workshop discussion.  I welcome comments, questions, and continued conversation.  This will be the first of a number of posts about the “publishing” part of the “Publishing the Long Civil Rights Movement” project.

The workshop began with a number of “what ifs” suggested by LCRM team member Mark Simpson-Vos, who is an acquisitions editor at the University of North Carolina Press and a project team member, relating to “publishing as community”:  What if works of scholarship were published online with a commenting feature allowing authors and others to link to primary sources and enrich the work on an ongoing basis?   Continue reading ‘Digital Publishing Workshop’

Getting More Out Of Google

At the LCRM project, one thing we are doing is examining existing online research tools and thinking about how they can be better used in scholarly communication and research. One thing that we found is that Google can be used in some interesting ways, particularly if you use the Advanced Search to generate your results.
Continue reading ‘Getting More Out Of Google’