University of Virginia Electronic Text Center Records University of Virginia Electronic Text Center Records finding aid RG 12/39

University of Virginia Electronic Text Center Records finding aid RG 12/39


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Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library

Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library
P.O. Box 400110
University of Virginia
Charlottesville, Virginia 22904-4110
URL: https://small.library.virginia.edu/

Joseph Azizi

Repository
Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library
Identification
RG 12/39
Title
University of Virginia Electronic Text Center Records 1997-2022
URL:
https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/195710
Quantity
9.5 Cubic Feet, Combination of physical materials from main collection and first two additions.
Quantity
0.397 Gigabytes
Creator
University of Virginia. Library
Language
English , Japanese .

Administrative Information

Copyright

The University of Virginia holds some of the copyrights in this collection. Please inquire about permissions for reuse. Visit our Permissions and Publishing page for more information about use of Special Collections materials. The library can provide copyright information upon request, but users are responsible for making their own determination about lawful use of collections materials. https://www.library.virginia.edu/special-collections/services/publishing

Conditions Governing Access

This collection is open for research use.

Access Note for born-digital materials - Archived webpages

Archive-It can be difficult to navigate. Captured websites are not arranged or displayed in any particular order, and sub-pages from the same broader site may not be presented together. Not all pages within a site may have been captured. After clicking on the desired link from the list of websites, the webpages as they were archived can viewed by clicking on the hyperlinked date-of-capture above the calendar. Clicking the url hyperlink will navigate out of the Archive-It website to the live webpage if it still exists.

Due to their nature, archived websites and webpages do not have the same search functionality as do live websites. Users cannot search for content within the scanned texts in the archived site.

Preferred Citation

RG 12/39, University of Virginia Electronic Text Center Records, Small Special Collections Library, Univiersity of Virginia.

Processing Information

This finding aid was created for creating access to recent and future additions. The guides for original acquisition and previous additions can be found in the online catalog.


Scope and Contents

The University of Virginia Library Electronic Text Center Records are currently divided into four series. As a part of the University Archives, this is a crowing collection, where a new series will be created with each new addition. The first series is the initial accession, and the latter three including the first, second, and third additions. This collection includes correspondence, policies and procedures, files on grants, other forms of documentation, and some printed material. There is a substantial amount of material on the Japanese Text Initiative project. Many of the materials regarding the Japanese Text Initiative are copies of source material used for the project, primarily are written in Japanese, that have annotations and notes attached to them, as well as notes, emails, and information about programs and standards used for this project written in English and Japanese. Also included are the records of Kendon Stubbs, Librarian Emeritus of the University of Virginia, that focus on the University's efforts to obtain the Raymond Danowski Poetry Collection and the operations of the Rare Book School. Physical materials are arranged as found and are unprocessed.

The born-digital part of the collection includes archived web pages from websites created by the University of Virginia Electronic Text Center, or as a partnership with other organizations and groups. The University of Virginia Electronic Text Center Records Archived Web Pages collection record can be found here: https://archive-it.org/collections/22178. Currently, the Japanese Text Initiative Website, most recent addition, is the only archived website for this collection. The Japanese Text Initiative website was a collaborative effort of the University of Virginia Library Electronic Text Center and the University of Pittsburgh East Asian Library to make texts of classical Japanese literature available on the World Wide Web. The short term goal of this initiative was to "put online most or all of the Twenty Classical Works in J. Thomas Rimer's A Reader's Guide to Japanese Literature, revised edition (New York: Kodansha, 1999)." Generally, the goal was to "add a wide range of pre-twentieth-century works." The main audience according to the creators are English-speaking scholars and students.

Original guide to the collection, RG-12/39/1.151: https://search.lib.virginia.edu/sources/uva_library/items/u6562665

Guide to first addition, ViU-2022-0023: https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/repositories/3/accessions/1403

Guide to second addition, ViU-2021-0166: https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/repositories/uva-sc/accessions/university_library_digital_library_production_serv

Arrangement

This collection is arranged into four series:

1. The initial collection of 5 boxes that includes material regarding the Japanese Text Initiative, accessioned in 2015.

2. The first addition: 1 box with the records of Kendon Stubbs, Librarian Emeritus of the University of Virginia, accessioned in 2021.

3. The second addition: 4 boxes with records of Japanese Text Initiative project, accessioned in 2019.

4. The third addition: archived webpages from the Japanese Text Initiative website, crawled on January 8, 2024.

Subjects and Indexing Terms

  • Digital humanities
  • Japanese literature

RG 12/39 - University of Virginia Electronic Text Center Records Web Archives collection record

https://archive-it.org/collections/22178


Container List

Records of the Electronic Text Center, RG-12/39/1.151
5 Cubic Feet
1997-2005
Scope and Contents

The collection includes correspondence, policies and procedures, files on grants and some printed material. There is a substantial amount of material on the Japanese Text Initiative.

https://search.lib.virginia.edu/sources/uva_library/items/u6562665

Electronic Text Center-addition 1, ViU-2022-0023
Mixed Materials [X032571176] box: ViU2022.0023_001
0.5 Cubic Feet One legal-sized document box
1985-2002
Scope and Contents

The addition to University Library/ Electronic Text Center (RG 12/39) contains the records of Kendon Stubbs, Librarian Emeritus of the University of Virginia. The files include correspondence, notes, gift proposals, collection information, and resource management documentation focused on the University's efforts to obtain the Raymond Danowski Poetry Collection and the operations of the Rare Book School. This collection also contains xerox copies of daily planners, correspondence, and notes.

https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/repositories/3/accessions/1403

University Library: Digital Library Production Services (Japanese Initiative)- addition 2, ViU-2021-0166
Mixed Materials [X032570999] box: ViU2021.0166_1 Mixed Materials [X032571000] box: ViU2021.0166_2 Mixed Materials [X032571001] box: ViU2021.0166_3 Mixed Materials [X032571002] box: ViU2021.0166_4
4 Cubic Feet
1997-2005
Scope and Contents

This addition RG 12 University Library includes records of the Japanese Text Initiative project. A majority of the materials are copies of source material used for the project and primarily are written in Japanese. Many have annotations and notes attached to these documents. Also included are notes, emails, information about programs and standards used for this project written in English and Japanese. Materials are arranged as found.

https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/repositories/uva-sc/accessions/university_library_digital_library_production_serv

Japanese Text Initiative Web Archive
0.397 Gigabytes
1998-2022
Scope and Contents

This archived website was a collaborative effort of the University of Virginia Library Electronic Text Center and the University of Pittsburgh East Asian Library to make texts of classical Japanese literature available on the World Wide Web. An important purpose is to make JTI texts in both Japanese and English searchable, both individually and as a group. The short term goal of this initiative was to "put online most or all of the Twenty Classical Works in J. Thomas Rimer's A Reader's Guide to Japanese Literature, revised edition (New York: Kodansha, 1999)." Generally, the goal was to "add a wide range of pre-twentieth-century works." The main audience according to the creators are English-speaking scholars and students.

Archive-It collection record: https://archive-it.org/collections/22178 - the webpages as they were archived can viewed by clicking on the hyperlinked date-of-capture above the calendar.

Access Note for born-digital materials - Archived webpages

Archive-It can be difficult to navigate. Captured websites are not arranged or displayed in any particular order, and sub-pages from the same broader site may not be presented together. Not all pages within a site may have been captured. After clicking on the desired link from the list of websites, the webpages as they were archived can viewed by clicking on the hyperlinked date-of-capture above the calendar. Clicking the url hyperlink will navigate out of the Archive-It website to the live webpage if it still exists.

Due to their nature, archived websites and webpages do not have the same search functionality as do live websites. Users cannot search for content within the scanned texts in the archived site.

Processing Information

Captured on January 8, 2024.

Conditions Governing Use

From the website: "We do not put on the Web copyrighted texts, unless we have permission from the copyright holders. With some exceptions, the texts of current scholarly editions of literature in English, French, German, Japanese, and other languages are not freely available for sites such as ours. As a result, we use texts without copyright constraints, such as editions for which copyright has expired. The texts and images in the Japanese Text Initiative may not be downloaded or copied."