Difference between revisions of "Digital libraries"

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* [http://epc.buffalo.edu Electronic Poetry Center], est. 1994 by Loss Pequeño Glazier and Charles Bernstein at SUNY Buffalo. Hosts poetry books and periodicals; also lists contents from [http://eclipsearchive.org/ Eclipse] & [http://jacket2.org/reissues Jacket 2 Reissues]. [http://epc.buffalo.edu URL].
 
* [http://epc.buffalo.edu Electronic Poetry Center], est. 1994 by Loss Pequeño Glazier and Charles Bernstein at SUNY Buffalo. Hosts poetry books and periodicals; also lists contents from [http://eclipsearchive.org/ Eclipse] & [http://jacket2.org/reissues Jacket 2 Reissues]. [http://epc.buffalo.edu URL].
 
* [[UbuWeb]], est. 1996 by [[Kenneth Goldsmith]] as a resource for visual, concrete and sound poetry, soon expanded to include historical materials related more broadly to the avant-garde arts. [http://ubu.com URL]. [https://twitter.com/ubuweb Twitter].
 
* [[UbuWeb]], est. 1996 by [[Kenneth Goldsmith]] as a resource for visual, concrete and sound poetry, soon expanded to include historical materials related more broadly to the avant-garde arts. [http://ubu.com URL]. [https://twitter.com/ubuweb Twitter].
* [[Textz.com]], est. 2001 by [[Sebastian Lütgert]]/ROLUX; hosted theory and fiction in plain text.
+
* [[Textz.com]], est. 2001 by [[Sebastian Lütgert]]/ROLUX; hosted theory and fiction in plain text. [http://web.archive.org/web/20060411064533/http://www.textz.com/ URL] (archived version).
 
* [[Aaaaarg]], est. c2004 by [[Sean Dockray]] in the framework of the [http://thepublicschool.org/ Public School], originally focused on critical theory, later expanded to include art and humanities as such. [http://aaaaarg.fail/ URL]. [https://twitter.com/aaaarg Twitter]. [https://www.facebook.com/aaaarg.org/ Facebook].
 
* [[Aaaaarg]], est. c2004 by [[Sean Dockray]] in the framework of the [http://thepublicschool.org/ Public School], originally focused on critical theory, later expanded to include art and humanities as such. [http://aaaaarg.fail/ URL]. [https://twitter.com/aaaarg Twitter]. [https://www.facebook.com/aaaarg.org/ Facebook].
 
* [[Monoskop:About|Monoskop]], est. August 2004 by [[Dušan Barok]] as a research initiative for documentation of media art, later expanded to the arts, media and humanities. [[Monoskop Log]] has branched out in 2009. [https://monoskop.org URL]. [https://twitter.com/monoskop Twitter]. [https://www.facebook.com/monoskoplog/ Facebook].
 
* [[Monoskop:About|Monoskop]], est. August 2004 by [[Dušan Barok]] as a research initiative for documentation of media art, later expanded to the arts, media and humanities. [[Monoskop Log]] has branched out in 2009. [https://monoskop.org URL]. [https://twitter.com/monoskop Twitter]. [https://www.facebook.com/monoskoplog/ Facebook].

Revision as of 16:43, 27 August 2017

Also electronic libraries, online libraries.

Arts, humanities and social sciences

Libraries

See also

Conferences, workshops, exhibitions

Interventions and research

Scanning

General interest

Libraries

Public domain, Creative Commons and Open Access texts

  • Project Gutenberg, est. 1971 by Michael Hart, has over 46k books in plain text, subsequently also converted to other formats. Hosted by ibiblio at U North Carolina, Chapel Hill. (multiple languages)
  • Perseus Digital Library, est. c1987 by Gregory R. Crane, covers the history, literature and culture of the Greco-Roman world. The collection contains editions and modern English translations of hundreds of ancient Greek, Roman, Arabic, Germanic and other texts. Maintained by the Department of the Classics, Tufts U.
  • arXiv, est. 1991 by Paul Ginsparg. Has over 1M e-prints in physics, mathematics, computer science, quantitative biology, quantitative finance and statistics in PDF and other formats (TeX, DVI, PostScript or HTML). Maintained by Cornell U. (English)
  • Project Runeberg, est. 1992 by Lars Aronsson. Contains works significant to the culture and history of the Nordic countries; as images and HTML text. Hosted by Lysator, an academic computer group at Linköping University. (multiple languages)
  • Liber Liber, est. 1994 by Marco Calvo, Gino Roncaglia, Paolo Barberi, Fabio Ciotti and Marco Zela. (Italian)
  • Internet Archive, est. 1996 by Brewster Kahle. The section 'eBooks and Texts' contains almost 8M scanned texts as high-resolution images, subsequently also converted to other formats. (multiple languages)
  • Wikisource, a Wikimedia project started 2003. Contains around 500k texts in wiki form. (multiple languages)
  • HathiTrust, est. 2008. A partnership of 100+ research institutions and libraries. Also includes content digitised by Internet Archive digitisation initiatives and Google Books. Access to copyrighted works requires an institutional subscription. (multiple languages)

Autonomous/independent libraries

See also

National libraries

Commercial libraries hosting academic journals

See also

See also

Literature

Essays, talks, statements, interviews

Journal issues and special sections

Discussions

Academic research and writing

Survey articles

Further reading

Texts listed on the wiki pages of respective initiatives: UbuWeb, Aaaaarg, Monoskop, Library Genesis.

See also

Digital humanities, Art servers, Media archives, Documentation science, Commons, Copyright activism, Internet activism