Virtual Slavica

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A01=Michael Neubert
academic metadata standards
aid
archives
Author_Michael Neubert
Bibliographic Instruction
Category=GLH
Category=GLM
comintern
Comintern Archives
copyright in digital collections
CPUSA
Cyrillic Character
Cyrillic text encoding
digital
digital manuscript preservation
Digital Reference
Digital Scholarly Editions
digital Slavic archives management
East European Library
East View
East View Information Services
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
FEB
finding
Full Text Databases
German Government
haworth
Kansas State Historical Society
KU Libraries
library
multilingual library systems
National Bibliographies
National Library
press
queens
Queens Borough Public Library
Reference Librarians
Russian Language
Russian Language Materials
Russian National Library
Slavic Catalogers
Slavic information science
Slavic Librarians
studies
UNC Library
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9780789026859
  • Weight: 600g
  • Dimensions: 148 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Apr 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Get an inside view of producing digital information projects

Digital technology has provided great opportunities as well as colossal challenges for information professionals at Slavic libraries, collections, and archives. Virtual Slavica: Digital Libraries, Digital Archives presents leading information experts exploring the monumental task of converting Slavic manuscripts and books for presentation in the digital realm. Readers get a clear inside view of how to conquer the various challenges that arise within digital library and archive projects through detailed descriptions of specific projects discussed in easy-to-understand language.

Slavic studies present innate problems when attempts are made to allow access to the material over the Internet. The Cyrillic alphabet is just one of the huge stumbling blocks standing in the way of universal access to this important material. Virtual Slavica: Digital Libraries, Digital Archives provides practical strategies for anyone looking for answers to problems within their own virtual information project. Copyright issues, digital reference, text encoding, online translation, presentation issues, and use of grant funding are some the topics comprehensively discussed to give information professionals clear solutions to the issues they may be facing. The book is carefully referenced.

Virtual Slavica: Digital Libraries, Digital Archives examines:

  • the persistence of multiple standards for digitally handling the Cyrillic alphabet
  • presenting the Comintern archives online
  • FEB-webits structure, the creation of digital editions, its plans for the future
  • copyright issues in the twenty-first century
  • Meeting of Frontiersthe reorganization of the text content of the international collaborative digital library project at the Library of Congress
  • standardized encoding
  • practical and theoretical programming issues
  • the unforeseen difficultiesand solutionsto complete a grant-funded digital Slavic project
  • and more

Virtual Slavica: Digital Libraries, Digital Archives is of keen interest to librarians, archivists, Slavic studies academics, and library and information science educators and students.

Michael Neubert, MLS, MAIS, is Digital Projects Coordinator at the Library of Congress, and Team Leader for the Digital Conversion Team whose staff produce American Memory, Global Gateway, and other digital conversion projects.

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