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Upholding Bodley’s vision: the Google mass digitisation project at Oxford

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 June 2016

Ronald Milne*
Affiliation:
Bodleian Library, Oxford OX1 3BG, UK
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Abstract

For most of the 400 years of the Bodleian Library’s existence, users have had to travel to Oxford to use its collections. In recent years, Oxford has undertaken a number of focused, ‘boutique’ digitisation projects. Now, as a partner in the Google Library Project, an immense range of scholarly and other 19th-century out-of-copyright library materials from the Bodleian’s collections will be digitised en masse and will be made freely available over the internet to anyone who has web access. Millions of books and journals will be scanned in the course of the Project and the author contends that digitisation on such a scale represents a revolution in the dissemination of information that parallels the impact of the invention of printing from moveable type in the 15 th century.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Art Libraries Society 2006

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References

2. The JIDI project enabled digitisation of copyright-cleared resources in a number of archival collections. See http://www.ilrt.bris.ac.uk/jidi/.Google Scholar
6. Lavoie, Brian, Connaway, Lynn Silipigni and Dempsey, Lorcan, ‘Anatomy of aggregate collections: the example of Google Print for libraries’, D-Lib Magazine 11, no. 9 (September 2005). http://www.dlib.org/dlib/september05/lavoie/091avoie.html.CrossRefGoogle Scholar