The Dalhousie Libraries is excited to announce the launch of the Kipling Scrapbook digital exhibit: http://kipling.library.dal.ca
This project involved digitizing and contextualizing the Rudyard Kipling Scrapbooks — part of the internationally renowned Kipling Collection held in the Dalhousie Libraries’ Special Collections. The project was profiled in 2017 as part of a series of blog posts — one highlighting the project and the collection and another exploring the scrapbooks themselves.”
“Digitizing the Kipling scrapbooks is part of the Libraries’ ongoing efforts to digitize its archival and special collections and make them broadly available to the world as well as to preserve the unique and rare materials that the library holds. It is hoped that by making these collections more broadly available that new forms of research and scholarship will be enabled through the use of these materials,” said Roger Gillis, Digital Humanities Librarian.
“The entire Kipling Project Team are to be congratulated on a beautifully prepared exhibit that highlights one of the Libraries’ important and valuable collections,” said Michael Moosberger, Associate University Librarian for Archives, Special Collections and Records Management. “The development of this project, which integrates geospatial technology along with high-resolution digitization and sophisticated metadata, will allow students and faculty the opportunity to engage with these historical publications in new and innovative ways. The project also illustrates how the field of digital scholarship is an important and growing part of the Libraries’ mandate and can breathe new life and new opportunities into iconic library resources whose importance to teaching and learning has not diminished.”
About the Kipling Collection
The Dalhousie Libraries Kipling Collection has an international reputation as the most comprehensive collection of Rudyard Kipling’s publications in the world. Containing an exhaustive selection of Kipling’s literary and journalistic works, the Kipling Collection holds important research ephemera and support material by and about Kipling, such as manuscripts, letters, pamphlets, original illustrations included in Kipling’s works, autographs, sketches, and sheet music for poems set to music.
The Kipling Collection also contains the Kipling Collection Scrapbooks: eleven scrapbooks created by notable nineteenth and twentieth century Kipling enthusiasts from England and the United States. There are seven known collectors: Sir William Garth, Ellis Ames Ballard, G. D. Wells, James Todman Goodwin, and three unidentified collectors. (The collectors of these scrapbooks will be explored in a future post in this series.) These scrapbooks are informal compilations, which preserve Kipling’s early journalistic works, as well various versions and editions of poems, short stories, and serials, many of which no longer survive in their original form. The full scrapbooks are available in Dalspace.
About the Exhibit
In 2017, Dalhousie Libraries’ digitized the scrapbooks and developed a digital exhibit via the Libraries’ new digital exhibit space using Omeka, an open source web-publishing platform. The project team consisted of Roger Gillis (Project Manager / Digital Humanities Librarian), Diana Doublet (Digitization Assistant), and Jessica Ruzek (Digital Exhibit Assistant), and Karen Smith (Special Collections Librarian).
The Exhibit features contextual information on Kipling, the scrapbooks, as well as British travel writing, as well as an interactive timeline and map that features a Map exploring some of Kipling’s travels and writing during his time as a journalist in late nineteenth-century India.