Digital Humanities in the Memory Institution: The Challenges of Encoding Sir Hans Sloane’s Early Modern Catalogues of His Collections

Catalogues are the core documents of museum structure and meaning. Yet no significant computational analysis has been made of how catalogues from the early modern period are constructed or of the way their structure and content relate to the world from which collections are assembled. The Leverhulme...

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Main Authors: Alexandra Ortolja-Baird, Julianne Nyhan, Kim Sloan, Martha Fleming, Victoria Pickering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2019-06-01
Series:Open Library of Humanities
Online Access:https://olh.openlibhums.org/article/id/4581/
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spelling doaj-aa70e93c484e4728b948fa351fe9d3f52021-08-18T11:13:54ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesOpen Library of Humanities2056-67002019-06-015110.16995/olh.409Digital Humanities in the Memory Institution: The Challenges of Encoding Sir Hans Sloane’s Early Modern Catalogues of His CollectionsAlexandra Ortolja-Baird0Julianne Nyhan1Kim Sloan2Martha Fleming3Victoria Pickering4British Museum British MuseumBritish MuseumBritish MuseumCatalogues are the core documents of museum structure and meaning. Yet no significant computational analysis has been made of how catalogues from the early modern period are constructed or of the way their structure and content relate to the world from which collections are assembled. The Leverhulme-funded ‘Enlightenment Architectures: Sir Hans Sloane’s catalogues of his collections’ (2016–19), a collaboration between the British Museum and University College London, with contributing expertise from the British Library and the Natural History Museum, seeks to change this. The Enlightenment Architectures project is analysing Sloane’s original manuscript catalogues of his collections to understand their highly complex information architecture and intellectual legacies. In this article we explore some of the challenges of seeking to integrate the methods of digital humanities with those of cataloguing, inventory, curatorial and historical studies and of bringing such interdisciplinary approaches to bear on early modern documentary sources. We do this through two case studies that highlight the approaches to encoding Sloane’s catalogues in TEI that Enlightenment Architectures has employed and the major challenges that these have brought to the fore.https://olh.openlibhums.org/article/id/4581/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexandra Ortolja-Baird
Julianne Nyhan
Kim Sloan
Martha Fleming
Victoria Pickering
spellingShingle Alexandra Ortolja-Baird
Julianne Nyhan
Kim Sloan
Martha Fleming
Victoria Pickering
Digital Humanities in the Memory Institution: The Challenges of Encoding Sir Hans Sloane’s Early Modern Catalogues of His Collections
Open Library of Humanities
author_facet Alexandra Ortolja-Baird
Julianne Nyhan
Kim Sloan
Martha Fleming
Victoria Pickering
author_sort Alexandra Ortolja-Baird
title Digital Humanities in the Memory Institution: The Challenges of Encoding Sir Hans Sloane’s Early Modern Catalogues of His Collections
title_short Digital Humanities in the Memory Institution: The Challenges of Encoding Sir Hans Sloane’s Early Modern Catalogues of His Collections
title_full Digital Humanities in the Memory Institution: The Challenges of Encoding Sir Hans Sloane’s Early Modern Catalogues of His Collections
title_fullStr Digital Humanities in the Memory Institution: The Challenges of Encoding Sir Hans Sloane’s Early Modern Catalogues of His Collections
title_full_unstemmed Digital Humanities in the Memory Institution: The Challenges of Encoding Sir Hans Sloane’s Early Modern Catalogues of His Collections
title_sort digital humanities in the memory institution: the challenges of encoding sir hans sloane’s early modern catalogues of his collections
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Open Library of Humanities
issn 2056-6700
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Catalogues are the core documents of museum structure and meaning. Yet no significant computational analysis has been made of how catalogues from the early modern period are constructed or of the way their structure and content relate to the world from which collections are assembled. The Leverhulme-funded ‘Enlightenment Architectures: Sir Hans Sloane’s catalogues of his collections’ (2016–19), a collaboration between the British Museum and University College London, with contributing expertise from the British Library and the Natural History Museum, seeks to change this. The Enlightenment Architectures project is analysing Sloane’s original manuscript catalogues of his collections to understand their highly complex information architecture and intellectual legacies. In this article we explore some of the challenges of seeking to integrate the methods of digital humanities with those of cataloguing, inventory, curatorial and historical studies and of bringing such interdisciplinary approaches to bear on early modern documentary sources. We do this through two case studies that highlight the approaches to encoding Sloane’s catalogues in TEI that Enlightenment Architectures has employed and the major challenges that these have brought to the fore.
url https://olh.openlibhums.org/article/id/4581/
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