Friday, August 21, 2009

Panjab Digital Library

Reported by : Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 23, No. 241. Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London

For the first time ever a searchable collection of millions of rare
pages on the Sikhs and the region of Panjab has been made available.
Panjab Digital Library (PDL) will include texts of manuscripts,
books, magazines, newspapers and photographs and will be available to
anyone with Internet access at www.PanjabDigiLib.org. This launch was
made possible in part by The Nanakshahi Trust and the Sikh Research
Institute (SikhRI).

PDL has been in development since 2003, charged with a mission to
select, collect, preserve, digitize and make accessible the
accumulated wisdom of Panjab. Texts were included without distinction
as to script, language, religion, nationality, or other human
condition.

“Since long, preservation of heritage, research and education have
been a victim of apathy in Panjab; more so, in the last century. With
the launch of the online digital library, we have tried to fill some
of that gap. PDL is a humble offering to the community what it lost
25 years ago,” said Harinder Singh, co-founder and executive director
of SikhRI who also serves on PDL board. “Scholars will be able to
access a wide variety of information concealed in the manuscripts and
other literature of the region with the click of a mouse sitting in
the comfort of their homes. This is essential to the growth of Sikh
and Panjab studies and its meaningful representation in the
fast-changing modern world.”

Digitization technology brings with it untold benefits for heritage
preservation and access. Once a document has been properly digitized
it becomes immortal and can remain accessible long after the original
has ceased to exist. The option of digital access further aids in
preservation of originals through reduced need for physical handling.
The central digital archive which the PDL has developed over the last
six years allows for wide electronic access to the public and will
help the researcher to search, browse and sift through vast amounts
of data in seconds.

According to Davinder Pal Singh, PDL’s co-founder and executive
director, “PDL will break many barriers which currently restrict a
conventional library. Information is decentralized, through its
shared storage and access model, thus enabling utilization of a
single resource concurrently by multiple users all over the world. On
a local note, assuming that every household will possibly have a
computer within the next ten years, PDL holds great promises for the
people of Panjab especially.”

“To date, PDL has been instrumental in digitally preserving over 2.5
million folios from 3,400 manuscripts, 2,200 books, 1,990 issues of
periodicals, 5,578 issues of newspapers, 3,152 photographs, 248,000
legal documents and some 168 hours of video recordings,” commented
Gurvinder Singh, PDL’s US Coordinator. The current collection of data
amounts to about 15,000 GB of available information.

Among others, major institutional collections digitized to date
include SGPC, DSGMC, Government Museum and Art Gallery Chandigarh,
Chief Khalsa Diwan, Panjab Languages Department, and Kurukshetra
University . Critical works of significant importance from the
personal collections of Prof. Pritam Singh, Dr. Man Singh Nirankari,
Dr. Kirpal Singh, Dr. Madanjit Kaur and Prof. Gurtej Singh are also
available at PDL.

"PDL is the only non-profit, non-governmental organization to have
initiated a digitization project for the preservation and upkeep of
Panjab archives, and perhaps the only one in India ” said Gurnihal
Singh Pirzada Director, PDL’s board member. “PDL has undertaken
rigorous research and laid solid ground work in order to be in the
best possible position for this launch. Projects around the globe
were closely studied as models for establishing a successful
digitization project. Internationally recognized benchmarks were
referred to and complied with,” he further said.

PDL is an ongoing project in its early stages and the collection will
grow substantially in coming years. New titles are being digitized
everyday and the Web site will be updated with new features and
titles on monthly basis. PDL staff will be adding at least 50,000
pages per week to the Web site’s collection.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

The South Asian Language Review Journal

The South Asian Language Review (SALR) is an research journal published by the Indian Institute of Language Studies (IILS) established in January, 1980. Access to current, back and forthcoming issues of this journal is available free at:http://salr.net/volumexvii2.aspx

Friday, May 8, 2009

" Words of the World" Library Exhibit in conjunction with the Jackson School of International Studies Centennial Celebration

The International Studies librarian at University of Washington libraries has put together an
exhibit titled "Words of the World" in conjunction with the Jackson School of International Studies centennial celebration. This exhibit showcases rare and interesting collections from different areas of international studies. The exhibit will be on from May 8th - May 31st, 2009 in the Allen North Lobby of Suzzallo/Allen Libraries.

Libraries and Archives in South Asia (LASA) wiki

From The Asian Studies WWW Monitor: Apr 2009, Vol. 16, No. 6 (296)

Digital South Asia Library, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, US.


The Digital South Asia Library is pleased to announce the launch ofthe Libraries & Archives in South Asia (LASA) wiki, a collaborativeuser-driven effort to compile a guide to South Asian libraries andarchives for academics and researchers in the humanities and socialsciences. The LASA wiki contains detailed information about librariesand archives in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives,Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. It aims to become a full-fledgedportal to research in South Asia, for the scholarly community and bythe scholarly community.Any entry in the wiki can be improved upon with new or updatedinformation. A typical entry contains location, contact information,basic access and collection information and a link to theinstitution's website when it is available. More detailedinformation, including maps, photographs, links to online catalogs,etc. are provided when available. The LASA wiki was created by Samip Mallick, AssistantBibliographer for Southern Asia at the University of Chicago Library.- jn."
URL http://dsal.uchicago.edu/lasa/

Four more Indian journals convert to open access

India's National Institute of Science Communication and Information Resources (NISCAIR) has converted four more of its 17 journals to OA and plans to convert the rest this summer. Details from Subbiah Arunachalam:

Now four more journals have become open access: Indian Journal of Chemistry B Indian Journal of Radio and Space Physics Journal of Scientific and Industrial Research Indian Journal of Pure & Applied Physics

This information is not yet recorded by DOAJ.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Madan Puraskar Pustkalaya launched their digital MPP portal

Madan Puraskar Pustakalaya has launched the Digital MPP portal on 13th March, 2008. Currently, they are making the images digitized through the EAP supported digitization project. Here is the link:

www.madanpuraskar.org/digitalmpp

Digital MPP is an initiative of Madan Puraskar Pustakalaya (MPP) for the preservation of its collection in digital medium and to make them more accessible to the users. In this first phase of digital MPP, about 7000 images are being made available through this site. Half the images are old and rare images from the MPP collection and the other half comprises of negatives from the collection of Madanmani Dixit which were acquired by MPP.

The images look fabulous.

Monday, February 25, 2008

Mellon Foundation Grant awarded for the publication of South Asian Book Series

January 30th, 2008 at 10:00 am
Mellon Foundation Grant awarded to Columbia University Press
The Mellon Foundation recently awarded Columbia University Press, the University Press of Chicago, and the University Press of California a grant to commence publication of a major book series covering South Asia. Read the full press release here.Columbia University Press, University of California Press, and the University of Chicago Press announce a new joint publishing effort in South Asian Studies.
Press Release
The University Presses of California, Chicago, and Columbia are pleased to announce that the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation has awarded a grant to commence publication of a major book series covering South Asia. Titled “South Asia across the Disciplines” the new series aims to publish six monographs per year, in a collaborative effort across all three University Presses with each press publishing two series books per year.
Each press has long-established roots in the field and is based at a university with outstanding South Asia faculty. In recent years, the market for South Asian studies books has declined along with the broader market for academic monographs in many fields, making it increasingly difficult for emerging scholars to get their work published. “South Asia across the Disciplines” will disseminate and promote new scholarship on South Asia by combining the efforts and resources of the three presses.
Jennifer Crewe, Associate Director and Editorial Director of Columbia University Press says “Our three presses have all published in the field of South Asian Studies for many years and developed programs reflecting the strengths of their faculties. But lately, as the sales have declined, it has become almost impossible to recover our costs and maintain our previous level of commitment to the field. This new collaborative venture will allow us to publish books we would otherwise have reluctantly declined and achieve a significant level of visibility for them.” Alan Thomas, Editorial Director for the Humanities and Sciences at the University of Chicago Press, adds that “the Mellon grant will allow our three presses to experiment with a collaborative approach to monograph publishing and at the same time help shape the vital but underserved field of South Asian Studies. By publishing the series jointly, we have the potential to reduce costs and quickly achieve a critical mass of new scholarship.”
Major editorial goals of the series will be to open up new archival material to scholars, to explore new theories and methods, and to develop scholarship that is both deep in expertise and broad in appeal across disciplines. To that end, three prominent scholars have agreed to serve as series editors: Dipesh Chakrabarty (University of Chicago, history), Sheldon Pollock (Columbia University, literature), and Sanjay Subrahmanyam (UCLA, history). An additional twelve-member editorial board will include senior faculty at the three universities. They will seek to acquire books for the series that cover history, literary studies, philosophy, religion, social or cultural anthropology, and other fields.
All books in the “South Asia across the Disciplines” series will have a common design but will appear under the imprint of one of the three presses. Acquisitions and marketing costs will be shared among the three presses and supported by the Mellon Foundation grant.