THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF JEWISH WOMENRe-imagining the Encyclopedia in the Age of the Internet
Ari DavidowConsultant/[email protected]
IN 1997
A revolutionary, 2-volume book
IN 2007
A revolutionary, CD-ROM
REFERENCE RICHES!From Sarah Aaronsohn to Krystyna Zywulska, this electronic encyclopedia contains 1,690 biographical entries, 300 topic essays, and 1,400 photographs and illustrations. Together they capture the histories and achievements of Jewish women from biblical times to the present day and shed light on their changing roles worldwide.
Accessible to lay readers and scholars alike, this exceptional work contains such valuable features as:
• Full-text search of all articles and captions, plus category, century, and country searches
• Extensive cross-references
• Glossary with pop-up definition links throughout
With contributions from over 1,000 world-famous historians and scholars, this is an unparalleled reference. Academic Sponsors: The Institute of Jewish Studies and the Avraham Harman Institute of Contemporary Jewry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
BUT, THE WORLD MOVED EVEN MORE QUICKLY
What can you do online that is as engrossing as reading several encyclopedia volumes, spread out on the floor?
First, expose the metadata.If we use tag clouds, people can see “how much”
Expose the metadata whenever you list an article.Now you have a Table of Contents that puts each entry in perspective
WHAT DOES AN ARTICLE LOOK LIKE?
We wanted to ensure that each element could be shared, remixed, used on its own
… and that readers could continue to add to the story.
… and they do.
ACCLAIM & CONSEQUENCES
(Project completed 2 weeks early.)
Launched on March 1, 2009, for Women’s History Month
Articles in all major Jewish media, blog posts, and more
Doubling of web traffic to jwa.org, where the Encyclopedia today constitutes the major source of web traffic.
New data formats (ways to enable discovery, re-mix, sharing down to the individual element) and use of CMS (Drupal) helped lead project to bring JWA exhibits into one common internal structure (still being completed)
New tools for gathering stories on jwa.org
NEXT STEPS
Tweeting the Encyclopedia of Jewish WomenThe Forward's Sisterhood blog, May 9, 2011."Although they were asked to commit to tweeting just one article a week, many of the partners have immediately embraced the project and have been tweeting multiple articles a day. Three days into the effort, 58 articles had already been tweeted — and retweeted many times over.”
"Abusch-Magder, who suggested the project idea to JWA, sees this as an experiment in harnessing the power of social media to let people transmit and translate historical information in their own way and to their own networks. 'Scholars are not going to make history popular, but something like this will,' the rabbi said."
To see the Encyclopedia in person:http://jwa.org/encyclopedia