South Seas Project: Voyaging and Cross-Cultural Encounters in the Pacific (1760-1800)
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Grant Holder:
South Seas is an online information resource for the history of European voyaging and cross-cultural encounters in the Pacific between 1760 and 1800. The first phase is focused on James Cook’s momentous first voyage of discovery of 1768-1771. South Seas offers the full text of the holograph manuscript of James Cook’s Endeavour Journal held by the National Library of Australia, together with the full texts of the journals kept by Joseph Banks and Sydney Parkinson on the voyage. You will also find the text of all three volumes of John Hawkesworth’s Account of the Voyages undertaken...in the Southern Hemisphere...(1773). Volumes two and three of this work are an account of the Endeavour voyage fashioned by Hawkesworth from Cook's and Banks's journals. These various fascinating historical documents are presented so that you can easily compare and contrast how the many remarkable occurrences on the voyage were interpreted by Cook, Banks and Parkinson. The are also accompanied by explanatory commentaries, short articles and reflective essays in the South Companion. In order to help explain the complexities of eighteenth century and navigation, we have provided the complete text of the 1780 edition of William Falconer's Dictionary of the Marine. South Seas has also been designed to facilitate discovery of historical images and rare maps relating to eighteenth-century voyaging in Australian and Pacific seas held by the National Library of Australia’s collections. This first phase of South Seas also contains online editions of several important works illustrative of indigenous Pacific cultures before and during the years between 1760 and 1800, as well as a number of literary works revealing how the experiences of voyagers captured the imagination of Europeans during the second-half of the eighteenth century.
Generation of HTML files from XML data for web-delivery
| Project start date: 2000-07 | Project end date: 2003-07 |
Subject domains:
| Methods used | Category |
|---|---|
| 2d Scanning and photography | Data capture |
| Documentation | Strategy and project management |
| Usability analysis | Strategy and project management |
| text | Content types |
Funding sources:
Australian Research Council, National Library of Australia
Content types created:
Dataset/structured data, Still Image/Graphics, Text
Digital resource created:
South Seas is an online reference guide to Captain James Cook's momentous first Pacific voyage of discovery (1768-1771). As well as providing the full text of Cook's journal and other important contemporary accounts of the voyage, it brings together and establishes relationships between information from many sources and in different forms (for instance, text, maps, and pictures) so that Cook's voyage can be understood within the context of 18th-century Pacific exploration and cross-cultural encounters.
Data Formats created:
Extensible Markup Language (XML), Hypertext Markup Language (HTML)
Metadata standards employed:
Dublin Core, simple (DC)
Publications:
Book Chapters
1.The Network and the Nation: the Development of National Bibliographical Resources, in P. Cochrane (ed.), Remarkable Occurrences: the National Library of Australia’s First 100 Years, 1901-2001 (Canberra: National Library of Australia, 2001), pp. 255-71.
2.Pictures of Health, an Australian History Web Project, in V. Burton and D. Herr (eds), Computing in the Social Sciences and Humanities, (Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2003): CD ROM media.
Articles
1.The Endeavour Project: Exploring Cross-Cultural History in Hypermedia, LASIE: Library Automated Systems Information Exchange, vol. 31, 1(2000), pp. 37-44.
2.Explorations in Hypermedia: the South Seas Project, Archives and Manuscripts, 30 (2002): 66-81.
Refereed Conference Papers
1.Explorations in Hypermedia: the Endeavour Project, Proceedings of the 2000 Pacific Neighbourhood Consortium Conference (Academica Sinica), University of California, Berkeley, January 2000.
2.The Endeavour Project: Explorations in Hypermedia, Proceedings of the Pacific Neighbourhood Consortium 2000 Meeting, http://pnclink.org/events-report/2000/ Proceedings/4-3-1.pdf
3.A New Foreign Country: The Challenges and Risks of Making History in Digital Media for Historians and Librarians, ALIA 2000, Canberra, October 2000, http:// www.alia.org.au/conferences/alia2000/authors/paul.turnbull.html
4.The South Seas Project: an Open Historical Knowledge Network, in Computing Arts [electronic resource] : Digital Resources for Research in the Humanities Sydney : University of Sydney Library, 2002. http://setis.library.usyd.edu.au/drrh2001/index.html
1.The Network and the Nation: the Development of National Bibliographical Resources, in P. Cochrane (ed.), Remarkable Occurrences: the National Library of Australia’s First 100 Years, 1901-2001 (Canberra: National Library of Australia, 2001), pp. 255-71.
2.Pictures of Health, an Australian History Web Project, in V. Burton and D. Herr (eds), Computing in the Social Sciences and Humanities, (Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2003): CD ROM media.
Articles
1.The Endeavour Project: Exploring Cross-Cultural History in Hypermedia, LASIE: Library Automated Systems Information Exchange, vol. 31, 1(2000), pp. 37-44.
2.Explorations in Hypermedia: the South Seas Project, Archives and Manuscripts, 30 (2002): 66-81.
Refereed Conference Papers
1.Explorations in Hypermedia: the Endeavour Project, Proceedings of the 2000 Pacific Neighbourhood Consortium Conference (Academica Sinica), University of California, Berkeley, January 2000.
2.The Endeavour Project: Explorations in Hypermedia, Proceedings of the Pacific Neighbourhood Consortium 2000 Meeting, http://pnclink.org/events-report/2000/ Proceedings/4-3-1.pdf
3.A New Foreign Country: The Challenges and Risks of Making History in Digital Media for Historians and Librarians, ALIA 2000, Canberra, October 2000, http:// www.alia.org.au/conferences/alia2000/authors/paul.turnbull.html
4.The South Seas Project: an Open Historical Knowledge Network, in Computing Arts [electronic resource] : Digital Resources for Research in the Humanities Sydney : University of Sydney Library, 2002. http://setis.library.usyd.edu.au/drrh2001/index.html
Institutions affiliated with this project:
Project staff and expertise:
| Principal staff member: | Professor Paul Turnbull; Mr Chris Blackall |
|---|---|
| Other staff: | Postdoctoral researcher(s) / Research assistant(s) |
| External expertise: |
| Metadata on this arts-humanities.net record | |
|---|---|
| Author(s) of record | Paul Turnbull |
| Title | South Seas Project: Voyaging and Cross-Cultural Encounters in the Pacific (1760-1800) |
| Record created | 2007-03-07 |
| Record updated | 2010-03-30 14:11 |
| URL of record | http://www.arts-humanities.net/node/2236 |
| Citation of record | Paul Turnbull: South Seas Project: Voyaging and Cross-Cultural Encounters in the Pacific (1760-1800). <http://www.arts-humanities.net/node/2236> created: 2007-03-07, last updated 2010-03-30 14:11 |