Library to Digital Disneyland?

This morning I was putting the finishing touches on my anatomy illustration essay — adding high quality digital images from the Wellcome Collection and the National Library of Medicine to demonstrate many of the points I’d made in writing.  During my research I’d used these online galleries to scope out primary sources before tackling the originals, and I was grateful that they were available for research and that the images could be downloaded to add visual impact to my completed text.

Adding images to a Word document can be a bit tedious, though, so when I finished I took a quick break to scan the news online, including Stuff, the web portal of New Zealand’s Dominion Post.  Between 2006 and 2007 I lived in Wellington on a working holiday visa, and I was dismayed to see the headline ‘From Library to Digital Disneyland‘ alongside a picture of the National Library.  The beauty and mystery of the internet: in just a few seconds I had moved from the productive, academic use of a digital library to an op-ed piece attacking a digital initiative.

The article is by Jim Traue, a former chief librarian of the Alexander Turnbull Library, a specialized collection within the National Library.  The piece is in reaction to planned changes to the library, particularly a new emphasis on digitization and access to digital materials for visitors on the ground floor.  But rather than a thoughtful critique of the plan’s details, or suggestions for changes and improvements, Traue has written a reactionary spiel.  He seems to be trapped in an antiquated mindset that sees digital technology as a threat and national librarians as the guardians of cold, inaccessible buildings housing materials for the use of specialists.

One of Traue’s arguments is that it is too costly for  libraries to work directly with digital technologies:

The division of costs between the research library and the researchers and publishers is being eroded. Traditionally, the research library gathered and preserved the original documents, and the staff organised them for use by researchers, courtesy of the taxpayer.

It was up to the researchers to invest their time to convert the raw materials in the library into finished products, and for the publishers to find the money to publish and distribute them.

Now the National Library is becoming a major publisher, at an increasing cost to the taxpayer, and staff will find themselves more and more involved in the time-consuming work required to get material prepared for digital publication.

Traue seems to think that that digital imaging should be a side agenda for national libraries, rather than a driving mandate.  He needs to catch up with modernity.

Major libraries around the world are embracing digital technology.  And these libraries are joining together for mutual support and the expansion of access, as we have seen with recent programs such as Europeana and the World Digital Library.  There are important challenges associated with digitization (such as cost, access to technology and talent, and managing digital preservation) but there are also many reasons to embrace this movement.  Digital materials dramatically increase the number of people who have access to documents without the damage that accrues through handling.  They offer sophisticated new methods for approaching material, such as software assisted text and image analysis and advanced search capabilities.  Accurate digital copies can be made and circulated amongst scholars in the blink of an eye, and connections may be discerned between isolated documents that an individual researcher would never have seen side-by-side in the past.  From a preservation standpoint, high quality images can be compared to judge an item’s rate of decay and to determine if it needs conservation work, and what type.  Digital copies of rare material mean that, should the unthinkable happen, there will still be a valuable record of lost, damaged, or destroyed items.  Today, digital librarianship is not the ‘cherry on top’ that an institution can choose to explore if it has some extra cash.  It is part of the main course alongside traditional library and archival methods.  It is to the credit of the leaders at the National Library that they are not letting New Zealand fall behind the rest of the world.  (As to the ridiculous notion that it should be for-profit publishers managing the dissemination of cultural materials, I would refer you to the on-going Google Book Search controversy.)

Traue’s dismissive and uninformed attitude toward digital librarianship is annoying, but not unexpected at a time of rapid technological change.  The truly troubling part of the piece comes with his blatant derision of the public.  You can practically see the sneer on his face when he states:

Chris Szekely, the Turnbull’s chief librarian (who also holds the new position of deputy national librarian), is assuring the public that the building makeover, mass digitisation and the restructuring of the Turnbull’s services will improve access and services for researchers.

Yeah, right. Instead of the Turnbull’s staff concentrating on building and organising comprehensive collections to provide total immersion for researchers creating new publications, their time and expertise will be diverted into preparing material for digitisation in order to feed the visitors clamouring for entertainment on the ground floor Disneyland.

Traue seems to have forgotten that a national library is the repository for a shared public heritage.  Even though it is not a lending library it still has a mandate to provide, even encourage, public access, and not just for intellectuals.  In the past this was understandably difficult because the main goal is always preservation, which conflicts with access.  But technology has dramatically expanded our ability to share cultural objects.  This has worked with resounding success at the British Library, which has a public lobby and galleries complete with touch-screen monitors for the Turning the Pages initiative, allowing anyone to interact with digital facsimiles of important and beautiful books.  I can’t count the number of times I’ve walked through the lobby of the British Library and seen someone blissfully examining the Diamond Sutra or the Lindisfarne Gospels.  Other libraries, including the US Library of Congress, have similar programs.  It sounds like this is the model for the changes in New Zealand, and I find it difficult to comprehend how this would be ‘Disneyfying’ the library.  Surely anyone visiting a library in the first place would be seeking education and enlightenment, rather than mindless entertainment as Traue seems to imply.

Instead of insulting the general public, it might be useful to consider what these visitors could do for the library, and the important connections that could be forged between the public and the institution.  A visitor who is able to interact with the materials in the library, who has a pleasant and educational experience, makes a real connection, and comes away with an understanding of the institution’s purpose is much more likely to support library initiatives and government funding.  That is not to say that the public face should be put ahead of other missions such as collection, preservation, and research just for an increase in visitors and funding.  But Traue has offered no hard evidence that the plan will negatively affect other library goals.

I’m not privy to what’s happening at the National Library of New Zealand.  There could be legitimate concerns about the way that change is being introduced or how money is being spent.  But you wouldn’t know that from this piece, which has little to say of substance.  Reactionary diatribes, like futurist theories of digital utopias, should not be given the spotlight.  National institutions, government, and the media need to engage in thoughtful dialogues about how technology is incorporated into the missions of libraries.  And rather than avoiding change, libraries must approach the future positively and explore new ways of interacting with the people they serve, whether they have PhDs or not.

That is not most books.

I wanted to point out a great interview at The Casual Optimist with Ben and Eric of the Book Cover Archive.  They talk about the impetus behind the site, favorite cover art, and books they’d love to redesign.  The last question is the inevitable ‘Are we finally seeing the end of print?’  The response is thoughtful and, in my opinion, spot on.  Eric explains that most books are not anything special, and that e-books could actually lead to more readers and a renewed emphasis on fine books and independent bookshops.

(That’s my opinion as a book lover, techie, and environmentalist.  The historian part of my brain shouts, ‘But we can learn about a culture from their trashy novels!’  Oh, shut up for once historian lobe.)

Museum Day

I had two essays due on Wednesday, so for a break I took Thursday off and went to the Science Museum and the V&A.

Half of the main hall of the Science Museum is taken up by a wonderful gallery called ‘Making the Modern World‘ that showcases important technologies and inventions from 1750 to the present.  Some of the things I was particularly taken with included a working model of a belt-driven workshop, Watson and Crick’s DNA model, the first difference engine, the first atomic clock, glass created by the Trinity nuclear test, and a Jacquard loom with punch-cards.  I was a bit disappointed, though, that there were no examples of printing technology on display, especially since the nineteenth century was such an innovative period for the industry.  Upstairs, though, is a walkway overlooking the main gallery, and lining it are models, like this one:

A scale-model of the Timson MK III Litho Wun-Up from 1976.

(Sorry for the blurriness.)  So, not exactly revolutionary, but kind of cool anyway.  Especially that mid-century avocado green; how could you go wrong with that?

Next stop was the V&A where I wandered, completely lost, through galleries for several hours (and this wasn’t even my first visit).  Here are the bookish highlights.  First, in the twentieth-century design room, this awesome, wildly impractical bookshelf that I believe has been featured in a number of blog posts about unique bookshelves:

Next, a display on the 40th anniversary of the Booker Prize, including short-listed and winning novels from the collection of Peter Straus.  (Again, apologies for the quality, my camera does not do well in low light.)

Europeana

Europeana, a portal compiling 2 million objects from 1,000 institutions in the EU, went live today.  Or it tried to go live and failed, with Wired reporting that it’s been receiving 10 million hits per hour.  Nice!

Europeana says that the goal is not only to merge existing resources but to promote further European digitization efforts.  Just the idea of having a single portal for so many different resources is fantastic, and I’m quite intrigued by this statement:

You can use My Europeana to save searches or bookmark things. You can highlight stuff and add it to your own folders.

Will we be seeing social networking and bookmarking applications along with the content?  The site is currently in beta, with version 1.0 scheduled for 2010, and I’m definitely excited about watching its evolution.  Hopefully things will have calmed down enough in a few days for a good look.

Techie Update

Couple of quick items:

I’ve been getting a lot of comment spam attempts lately, but I’ve been too lazy to do anything about it.  Then the reCAPTCHA thing hit the news and I thought that was pretty perfect for a book history blog.  So, my apologies for taking up your time with the typing of blurry letters, but at least we’re helping other book people out there (and stemming the tide of comment alerts I get in my email every day).

Second, I’ve been playing around with Twitter a bit over the last few months, sort of going back and forth about whether to keep it up.  Guess I’ll give it a serious shot now, and you can follow me if you want; I’m bookn3rd there, too.  It won’t be all book stuff, probably a lot of random observations and quirky things from my daily life.  (I’d also like to point out that I chose this site theme before I’d ever seen the Twitter page and I’m not changing just because they use the same bird!  *Grumble*)

Oh, and Ubiquity.  Awesome.

Sweatshop Books

Audra of The Vespiary has turned up a very interesting old book manufacturing exposé called Women in the Bookbinding Trade.  You can peruse the whole thing, with lots of neat photos, at Google Books.  I’ll definitely have to spend some time on this over the weekend.  Nice find!

If you happen to be in Madison, WI

The UW-Madison Department of Special Collections has created what looks like a fascinating exhibit on the use of color in scientific books between the 15th and 20th centuries.  It’s in conjunction with the 2008 Culture of Print in Science, Technology, Engineering and Medicine conference taking place in September, but the exhibit will be open all summer.  It focuses on changing color technologies and how the use of color was approached from a scientific perspective, drawing from the library’s extensive science and natural history collection.   For more information visit the Special Collections website.

Egypt and the Engraving Machine

The man above, Nicolas-Jacques Conté, was the inventor of the modern pencil and the world’s first engraving machine.  I’ve been reading about him in Napoleon and the Scientific Expedition to Egypt, an online exhibit from the Linda Hall Library (all the images in this post are from the LHL.)

Conté was one of Napoleon’s 150 savants, intellectuals charged with the study of Egypt’s culture and natural history during the French invasion, which began in 1798.  Conté was known as a mechanical genius (he was put in charge of the expedition’s balloon corps,) but had originally been a portrait painter in pre-Revolutionary France.  As a cultural observer in Egypt he made detailed studies of local trades and technologies, and he became responsible for publishing the expedition’s scientific record, the Description de l’Égypte, after his return to France in 1802. (Though he died in 1805 before the project was completed.)

The Linda Hall exhibit explains the necessity for mechanical engraving in producing the Description:

The first edition of the Description de l’Égypte eventually included 837 copperplate engravings, most of them impressively large elephant folios and some of them even bigger, double-elephant folios that were twice as large.  A single plate might require hundreds of engraved lines to faithfully portray, for example, the cloudless Egyptian sky.  The sky had to appear dark at the top and fade gradually to a pale expanse at the horizon… It stretched the limits of human ability, and the time to complete a single plate by traditional methods could be up to six months.

Conté’s machine (pictured below in an engraving from the Description) made it possible to quickly create long, uniform lines in a variety of depths.  This cut production time down from months to days for each plate, though it still took 20 years for the entire work to be completed due to the vast amounts of material and the difficulties of compiling and organizing all of it.

I’ve been reading about this engraving machine all over the internet and I’m still not 100% positive about how it worked, though it looks simple enough.  I’m also curious to know if it was embraced in Europe and whether it had an impact on engraving in general.  I don’t know much about engraving, though, so it’s hard to say.  (Come to think of it, I have lots of unanswered questions like, ‘what happened to make the eye patch necessary?’)

The next image is the example page, showing the different engraving patterns the machine was capable of producing (click for a larger version):

And here’s a complete engraving, demonstrating how the machine was able to give texture and depth to the sky (click for a larger image):

I particularly liked this quote, from a 2006 NY Times piece, about the engravings:

The versatile Conté met the challenge of the images’ imposing scale and fine detail by inventing an engraving machine that yielded a more subtle spectrum of grays relatively easily…. Perhaps this facilitated the almost preternatural fusion of subject and medium that distinguishes these prints. The geometry of ancient Egyptian architecture, illuminated by harsh Egyptian light, could not have been better suited to the eerie formalities of the engraving technique and its miragelike effects.

If you’ve found this interesting I definitely recommend checking out the entire exhibit.  The content is very satisfying, with lots of commentary and images, and I was totally enthralled reading about a bunch of nerds on an extended scientific adventure (quite often the artists would paint other savants painting Egyptian artifacts!)  The engravings in the Description are some of the most enduring images of Egypt created by Europeans, and I couldn’t even count the number of times I’ve seen one in a history book or documentary, so it’s very nice to have the whole story.

You can also view the entire Description online via the Bibliotheca Alexandrina.  The presentation is somewhat unfortunate, but the images are nice and can be enlarged.