update on the jewish heritage network

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OPEN EDUCATION: PROMOTING DIVERSITY FOR EUROPEAN LANGUAGES Update from EDRENE Members Dov Winer MAKASH Advancing CMC Applications Update on the Jewish Heritage Network

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Page 1: Update on the Jewish Heritage Network

OPEN EDUCATION: PROMOTING DIVERSITY FOR EUROPEAN LANGUAGES

Update from EDRENE Members

Dov Winer

MAKASH Advancing CMC Applications

Update on the Jewish Heritage Network

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Jewish Heritage Network

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Basic Services- Aggregation of Jewish Cultural Heritage related content- Enhanced contextualization of Cultural Heritage Projects- Media-centric portal with displays from partners- Links to the original pages on partners websites- Search engine and API for developers- Thematic collections- High quality digital experiences- Selected objects of interest to be featured in social media

and online magazines

Premium Services- Infrastructure and content management needs- Collection management systems- Secure professional hosting of high-resolution

images and audio-visual media- Custom services: engaging web sites, mobile applications

and experiences for specific audiences

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Latest developments

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Online Activities and Digital Resources today

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Dating

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Genealogy

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Social Networking

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Jewish Study and Education

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Museum of the Jewish Peoplehttp://www.bh.org.il

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Institutional Sites

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Cultural Heritage – Judaica Europeana

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Jewish participation in urban life in Europe

Jewish cultural expressions in European cities can be documented through objects dispersed in many collections: documents, books, manuscripts, periodicals, photographs, works of art, religious artefacts, postcards, posters, audio-recordings and films, as well as buildings and cemeteries.

History of the Jews by Heinrich Graetz, Leipzig 1864. Copper engraving of Moses Mendelssohn by A. and TH. Weger. Judaica Collection, Goethe University Library

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Why cities?

Jews are the longest-established minority in Europe with Jewish inscriptions in an urban context dating back to the 3rd Century BCE in Greece.

Marble plaque, bearing the images of a menorah, lulav and etrog. Found in 1977 by Prof. Homer Thompson near the ancient synagogue in the Agora of Athens. Probably part of the synagogue’s frieze, 3rd – 4th C.E. Jewish Museum of Greece

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Jewish contribution to European cities

Urbanisation and occupational specialisation has led to the identification of Jews with specific streets, neighbourhoods and other urban phenomena.

The J-Street Project by Susan Heller. Compton Verney Trust and the DAAD, Berlin, 2005. A book, installation and video produced with the support of the European Association for Jewish Culture.

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Jews and the City

Prof. Steven Zipperstein points to the anti-urban bias of most of the Jewish historiography and how this began to change at the end of the 20th century.S. Zipperstein (1987),Jewish Historiography and the Modern City. Jewish History vol 2, pp 77-88

“Modernization is about everyone becoming urban, mobile, literate, articulate, intellectually intricate, physically fastidious, and occupationally flexible. It is about learning how to cultivate people and symbols, not fields and herds. It is about pursuing wealth for the sake of learning, learning for the sake of wealth, and both wealth and learning for their own sake. It is about transforming peasants and princes into merchants and priests, replacing inherited privilege with acquired prestige, and dismantling social estates for the benefit of individuals, nuclear families, and book-reading tribes (nations). Modernization, in other words, is about everyone becoming Jewish.” Yuri Slezkine, The Jewish Century. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004. For the first chapter: http://press.princeton.edu/chapters/s7819.html

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The Judaica Europeana project

The facts• Co-funded by the eContentPlus program of the European Commission: initial budget framework of 3

Million Euro (~ 4 Million USD)

• First stage 2010-2012:

• Second stage 2012-14: continuity through a Memorandum of Understanding between partners and participation in DM2E – a 3-year Digital Humanities Europeana project to begin in 2012.

The program• Digitisation and aggregation of Jewish content for Europeana: 5 million objects

• Coordination of standards across institutions in order to synchronise the metadata with the requirements of Europeana.

• Deployment of knowledge management tools: vocabularies, thesauri and ontologies for the indexing,retrieval and re-use of the aggregated content.

• Dissemination activities to stimulate the use of digitised content in academic research; university- based teaching; schools; museums and virtual exhibitions; conferences; cultural tourism; the arts and multimedia.

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Milestones on the way to Judaica Europeana

The future of Jewish Heritage in Europe:an International Conference – Prague 24-27 April 2004

developing Jewish networking infrastructures

EC projects: MinervaPlus | CALIMERA | MOSAICA MICHAEL | ATHENA | LINKED HERITAGE

JAFI – Ministry of Science & Culture - NLI

JAFI | MiBAC | MLA Council UK | EAJC | EPOCH/ Univ Firenze | HaNadiv Foundation |European Day of Jewish Culture: ECJC, Bnai Brith, Juderias de Espana

Consultation on Digitisation of the Jewish Cultural Heritage10 December 2004 at the EC in BrusselsCultural Diversity in Europe: a focus for the consultation

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The growing network

35 institutions in 16 cities: museums, libraries and archives

Partners• European Association of Jewish Culture,

London• Judaica Sammlung der Universitätsbibliothek

der Goethe Universität, Frankfurt am Main• Alliance Israélite Universelle, Paris• Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activity

(MiBAC), Rome• Amitié, Centre for Research and Innovation,

Bologna• British Library, London• Hungarian Jewish Archives, Budapest• Jewish Historical Institute, Warsaw• Jewish Museum of Greece, Athens• Jewish Museum London• National Technical University, Athens

 

Associate Partners• Center Jewish History, New York• National Library of Israel, Jerusalem• Ministerio de Cultura, Madrid• Bibliotheca Rosenthaliana, Amsterdam• Jewish Historical Museum, Amsterdam• Jewish Museum Berlin • Jewish Museum, Frankfurt/Main• Leopold Zunz Centrum, Halle-Wittenberg• Lorand Collection, Augsburg University• Paris Yiddish Center—Medem Library• Sephardi Museum, Toledo• Central Zionist Archives, Jerusalem• Salomon Ludwig Steinheim Institute,

Duisberg• Ben Uri Gallery – The London Jewish

Museum of Art

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~3,700,000,700,000 digital objects

DM2E – another 1,500,000 and many additional expressions of interest

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Judaica Europeana

Virtual Exhibitions

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Virtual Exhibitions

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Virtual Exhibitions

http://exhibitions.europeana.eu/exhibits/show/yiddish-theatre-en http://exhibitions.europeana.eu/exhibits/show/dada-to-surrealism-en

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Virtual Exhibitions

http://www.culturaitalia.it/pico/speciali/stella_di_david_e_tricolore/index.html

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Judaica Europeana

Digital Humanities

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Supporting a Community of Knowledge

Jewish Enlightenment (HASKALA): The Republic of Letters Project Prof. Shmuel Feiner, Bar Ilan UniversityProf. Zohar Shavit, University of Tel Aviv Prof. Christoph Schulte, University of Potsdam

Researchers: Dr Chagit Cohen, Dr Natalie Goldberg, Dr William Hiscott, Dr Tal Kogman, PhD Dr Stefan Litt.

•Investigated the secularization of the traditional book culture

•Established a detailed database about a thousand books from the end of the 18th and early 19th century

•Texts in Hebrew, German. Database in SQL with a Visual Basic interface supporting some 147 pre-defined queries

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Slide from the presentation by PhD Dr Stefan Litt at the 8th EVA/Minerva Jerusalem Conference, November 2011

http://www.minervaisrael.org.il/2011/20111116_EvaMinerva_Haskala_StefanLitt.pdf

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Controlled vocabularies: hubs of Jewish Knowledge in the Structured Web

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Tasks for a common agenda on Jewish vocabularies

• Who? Names• Disseminate the use of VIAF• Seek to include periodical publications in VIAF• RAMBI• Long term common effort to achieve comprehensiveness

• Where? Places• JewishGen and Yad Vashem gazetteers as linked data?• Use Europeana guidelines to map places coordinates• Registry of Jewish gazetteers / RDF/ community based Jewish gazetteer

service similar to GeoNames, Freebase, LinkedGeoData etc• When? Periods

• Survey available vocabularies and seek to express them as Linked Data• Institutional tools for in-depth probe on current periodisation practices

http://www.judaica-europeana.eu/docs/jewish_vocabularies_LOD.pdf

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Who?

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When?

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When?

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Jewish gazetteers Where?

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http://www.judaica-europeana.eu/Search_Europeana_Collections_with_Judaic_categories.html

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http://www.judaica-europeana.eu/Search_Europeana_Collections_in_Hebrew.html

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Thank you for your attention!www.judaica-europeana.eu

Dov Winer

Judaica Europeana Scientific Manager

[email protected]

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