The David Livingstone Spectral Imaging Project is delighted to announce the 
first edition publication of two digital resources:

1.       Livingstone's 1871 Field Diary: A Multispectral Critical 
Edition(http://livingstone.library.ucla.edu/1871diary/)

2.       The Livingstone Spectral Image 
Archive(http://livingstone.library.ucla.edu/livingstone_archive/)


These resources are primary documents created by David Livingstone, the 
celebrated Victorian abolitionist, missionary, and explorer of Africa. The 
primary documents published online are of significant contributions to Digital 
Humanities and Digital Library endeavors, and also are of interest to scholars 
of Victorian literature, postcolonial studies, and African history.



The beta publication of these resources last fall drew worldwide interest, with 
full-length articles appearing in The New York Times,The Washington Post, BBC 
News, and many other outlets. The UCLA Digital Library Program now presents 
these two resources in revised and expanded versions with enhanced 
functionality. Collectively the resources make the text of Livingstone's 
previously illegible diary available for the first time in 140 years. The 
resources also bring together the 1871 Field Diary with a variety of related 
manuscripts for the first time since the nineteenth century. Nearly all 
materials are published and licensed for use under the Creative Commons 
Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License.

Livingstone's 1871 Field Diary: A Multispectral Critical 
Edition(http://livingstone.library.ucla.edu/1871diary/) reveals for the first 
time the words of a unique diary kept by Livingstone in the months prior to his 
famous meeting with Henry Morton Stanley. The diary also records Livingstone's 
uncensored, first-hand impressions of a horrific slave trading massacre in the 
Congo. Thanks to a letter from Livingstone, the massacre would become an iconic 
rallying point for late-Victorian abolitionists and help spur the 
British-enforced closure of the notorious Zanzibar slave market. Livingstone 
composed the diary crosswise over old newspaper pages with ink from the seeds 
of a local African plant - an expedient that has not stood the test of time. 
Today large portions of the text are illegible and nearly invisible to the 
naked eye. However, theDavid Livingstone Spectral Imaging 
Project(http://livingstone.library.ucla.edu/) has succeeded in restoring the 
full text of the diary by using advanced imaging technology and digital 
scholarship to produce a comprehensive critical edition. The edition also 
includes an extensive "Project History & Archive" that chronicles the journey 
of Livingstone’s text from its rediscovery in 2009 to its publication today. 
This section of the site contains over 60 downloadable documents and files that 
together provide a detailed account of the production of the critical edition 
and spectral image archive.

The Livingstone Spectral Image 
Archive(http://livingstone.library.ucla.edu/livingstone_archive/) enables easy 
and direct access to the images, transcriptions, and metadata of Livingstone's 
1870 and 1871 Field Diaries as well as select letters from the period, 
including the primary materials used forLivingstone's Letter from Bambarre 
(2010-2011,http://livingstone.library.ucla.edu/bambarre/). The archive, which 
consists of "flat" digital files not dependent on any graphical user interface 
(GUI), has been created to international library standards, and reflects the 
archival model established by the Archimedes Palimpsest Project 
(http://www.archimedespalimpsest.org/). The archive includes registered 
spectral TIFF images with metadata embedded in the header; TXT metadata files; 
XML TEI P5 transcriptions; MD5 checksum files to ensure data fixity; and 
extensive documentation. In most cases, the XML transcriptions also include 
spatial data linking lines of text to corresponding spectral image areas.

The publication of these two resources represents the culmination of a two-year 
collaborative, international endeavor that brings together scholars, 
scientists, archives, and educational institutions. The U.S. National Endowment 
for the Humanities and the British Academy have made the project possible 
through generous funding. Questions and comments about the project can be sent 
to project director Adrian S. Wisnicki, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, at 
<awisnicki(at)yahoo.com<http://yahoo.com/>>.

Best regards,
Lisa


Elizabeth (Lisa) McAulay
Librarian for Digital Collection Development
UCLA Digital Library Program
http://digital.library.ucla.edu/
Email: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

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