Updates

Sarah Burt and I have been scanning the many different copies of the novel in order to upload the paratext (everything not included in the text of the story itself) onto the website.  We have scanned many books on the book scanning machine, nicknamed Bertha, and have many more to go.  We also learned to take field notes of these books, which involves detailed observation.  Ben Ostermeier has taught us, and continues to teach us, the basics of all the programs needed to upload our pictures onto the server and the website.  Katie Knowles and Kayla Smith are renaming the items (paratext) we have uploaded, in order for users to locate them easier on the website.  All the members meet with Dr. DeSpain each week to go over our weekly and overall goals.

Oddities in Print

While scanning the different copies of The Wide, Wide World, I found some quirky details inside the 1896 Walter Scott edition.  I found a bookmark, without a date, advertising an old “life assurance” company.  The front of the bookmark lists the benefits of “The Methodist and General Assurance Society Ltd.”  The back of this elaborate bookmark pictures a house in the country surrounded by flowers.  Another oddity in this novel is the uncut pages at the end containing the advertisements. When this book was published, not all books came ready to read, as some publishers printed a few book pages on one large sheet of folded paper, and did not cut these separate pages apart.  Readers would use a tool to cut pages, much like people cut open envelopes today.  Though the majority of this particular edition has its pages free to read, the last eight pages of advertisements are not precut. The reader of this particular book did not care to read the advertisements apparently.  Dr. DeSpain will use a letter opener in order to tear them apart.  As it stands, the four middle pages are not legible because they are hidden between other pages of advertisements.  I had never seen pages left uncut, as publishers now do not print the same way as this particular book was printed.  It makes book history more unique and fascinating when a book demonstrates a past technology that I had never seen/heard of before working on this project.  This project has taught me so much about the various parts of books and how books were once made.

 

Upcoming Omeka Update

For a number of years now, the Wide, Wide World Digital Edition has used the Omeka web publishing platform. We have not, however, kept up with updates to Omeka software, as more recent versions configure their themes and database differently. The newer version has grown increasingly tempting, as it both allows for more flexibility in creating exhibits and has a built in responsive design, meaning the website will be viewable on smaller-resolution phones and tables.

Thankfully, my growing expertise in web development has given me the confidence to attempt the update. Already I made a few minor tweaks to the website’s theme this past spring, but now we’re heading for a larger update to the latest version of Omeka. Thus far I have made a newer theme compatible with the latest version of Omeka that is also responsive.

Under the guidance of Dr. DeSpain and fellow members of the project, I’ve based the theme on a prototype design for the website along with the current version. Check out the comparison bellow:

This is an old prototype of the website theme

This is an old prototype of the website theme

This is the current theme

This is the current theme

This is a prototype theme for the new version of the website

This is a prototype theme for the new version of the website

I am not yet done with the theme. It is likely I will replace the blue-green book cover with a red one to tie it to the color scheme. I will also possibly add a subtle texture to the background. Still, look forward to that update sometime soon.