General Interest
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Boris Ignatovich, 1899-1976
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Arts |
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This spectacular website, which garnered a Webby nomination for Best Art Website in 2016, is dedicated to the work of Russian Photographer Boris Ignatovich. Beginning in 1923, Ignatovich photographed the world around him until his death in 1976. His photography captured Russia during the earliest days of communism, World War II, and throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Created by the Innovator Foundation, a non-profit organization formed to preserve Ignatovich's work, this website invites visitors to learn more about Ignatovich's life and work through a collection of online exhibitions. These exhibitions display the skill and variety of Ignatovich's work, from portraiture to aerial photographs of the architecture and nature of the Caucasus region to haunting scenes from World War II. Visitors can explore the collection in two ways. Those who want to simply focus on Ignatovich's photographs can browse the Gallery; alternatively, the Museum, which is best viewed on desktop computers, offers an interactive timeline of Ignatovich's life and work set to music. While some items require a password to view, much of this remarkable collection is freely open to the public. [MMB] |
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World Science Festival: Video
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Science |
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Since 2008, the World Science Foundation has sponsored the World Science Festival, a series of lectures, panel discussions, performances, and debates that aims to "produce live and digital content that allows a broad general audience to engage with scientific discoveries." The Festival has featured a diverse collection of guests, including Anna Deavere Smith, Philip Glass, Stephen Hawking, and Oliver Sacks. On this website, visitors can check out dozens of videos created through this project. Many videos take the form of ninety-minute panel discussions, allowing visitors to hear multiple perspectives on a range of engaging issues. For example, the most recent video features a geneticist, a synthetic biologist, an ethicist, and a philosopher/bioethicist in conversation about the ethics of altering the humane genome. Another recent panel features actors, directors, and writers discussing the process of capturing important scientists and scientific discoveries in film and on stage. Visitors can watch most recent videos directly from this website, while the complete archive of World Science Festival videos is available on the organization's YouTube page. [MMB] |
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Houghton Library: Tumblr
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Arts |
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Harvard University's Houghton Library is home to a large number of rare books and manuscripts, including early modern manuscripts and the papers of Samuel Johnson, Emily Dickinson, and James Joyce. As the library's homepage notes, these collections, collectively, "touch upon almost every aspect of the human record, particularly the history and culture of Europe and North America, and include special concentrations in the history of printing and of theater." The Houghton Library has also created this fascinating Tumblr page as a way to highlight a diverse selection of remarkable items in its collection. Regularly updated, this site will appeal to anyone interested in print culture, art, or ephemera. In the past month, the Houghton Library Tumblr has featured an illustrated page from the original 1868 publication of Little Women; a close-up photograph of a gorgeous pierced silver bookbinding from the late eighteenth century; and a detailed illustrated frontispiece that accompanied the 1759 publication, A New universal history of arts and sciences, shewing their origin, progress, theory, use and practice, and exhibiting the invention, structure, improvement, and uses, of the most considerable instruments, engines, and machines, with their nature power, and operation. [MMB] |
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Witness
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Language Arts |
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For fans of literature and creative non-fiction, Witness is a literary magazine that "blends the features of a literary and an issue-oriented magazine to highlight the role of the modern writer as witness to his or her times." Readers of Witness may explore poetry, fiction, and nonfiction essays. The most recent online issue of the magazine features five short stories, the work of six poets, and an essay by writer Cynthia Lim about deciding to revisit, as an adult, the loss of her father and grandfather in a plane crash over Lake Tahoe when she was seven years old. Witness has been published since 1987 and is currently published out of the Black Mountain Institute at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Readers can browse archived material by issue or by genre (Fiction, Nonfiction, Poetry, and Photography). At the time of this writing, archived material dates back to 2009; the website indicates, however, that earlier work will be added to the magazine's webpage soon. [MMB] |
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Smithsonian Institution: Sidedoor
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Social studies |
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In October 2016, the Smithsonian Institution launched Sidedoor, a podcast dedicated to "science, art, history, humanity and where they unexpectedly overlap." Hosted and produced by Smithsonian staff members Tony Cohn and Megan Detrie, this podcast explores a wide range of issues in the form of twenty-minute episodes. In the inaugural episode, Cohn and Detrie examine how technology is shaping human interactions and identity via interviews with both researchers and contemporary teenagers. In another episode, dedicated to squabbles throughout history, Cohn and Detrie interview Smithsonian paleontologist Hans Sues on what dinosaur skulls can tell us about physical confrontations between these early creatures. On this website, visitors can listen to podcasts in full and check out related resources from the Smithsonian's collections and other sources. Interested listeners can also subscribe on iTunes. [MMB] |
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The Making of the British Landscape: From the Ice Age to the Present
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Social studies |
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Renowned geographer Nicholas Crane and the UK branch of the Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI) have teamed up to create this engaging story map about the geological history of Great Britain. Crane is an award winning writer and documentarian and currently serves as the president of the Royal Geographical Society; ESRI is an international company that creates GIS software. This story map traces the history of Great Britain from 12,000 years ago, when "Britain was the colourless, glacial extremity of a continuous landmass," to the present. With traditional and interactive maps, gorgeous photographs, and lively prose, this story map illustrates natural phenomena and human endeavors. Highlights include a three-dimensional diagram of Silbury Hill, the largest human-made mound in Europe, and the earliest surviving map of Scotland, created by Timothy Pont in the late sixteenth century. Those interested in learning more may want to read Crane's book of the same title. [MMB] |
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Victorian Collections
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Social studies |
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Although most of us probably think of Victorian England first, these Victorian Collections are from the State of Victoria in Australia. Artifacts have been contributed by hundreds of organizations, and in fact, the website serves as a kind of cultural heritage inventory, listing organizations that have contributed artifacts alongside those that have not contributed as yet. It's possible to approach the collections in several ways. A rotating selection from the 73,450 items in the collections is displayed badge-style on the home page, with additional information on any item of interest available with a click. Visitors can select Organisations to be taken to the directory and map; basic descriptive and contact information is provided for those organizations with no collection records. It's also possible to search across all collections using keywords and names, and searches can be limited to include only those artifacts with images. Finally, there's a growing set of stories - curated groupings of items on a theme. Available stories include: Stories of Women on the Land; SS Casino, 50 Years Steaming in Victoria's Western District; and Symbols of Survival, Prisoner of war and internee objects in Victorian cultural collections. Victorian Collections runs on a locally developed collection management system that is free to use for organizations within Victoria - terms of use for those in other geographic locations are not specified. [DS] |
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