New Zealand Electronic Text Centre
Web address | nzetc.victoria.ac.nz |
---|---|
Commercial? | No |
Type of site | Digital library index |
Registration | Free |
Available in | English |
Launched | 2002 |
Alexa rank | 330,399 (March 2012)[1] |
Current status | Active |
The New Zealand Electronic Text Centre (NZETC) (Māori: Te Pūhikotuhi o Aotearoa) was renamed in 2012 the New Zealand Electronic Text Collection due to internal restructuring.
The New Zealand Electronic Text Collection is a collection of the library at the Victoria University of Wellington which provides a free online archive of New Zealand and Pacific Islands texts and heritage materials. The Library has an ongoing programme of digitisation and feature additions to the current holdings within the NZETC. In the beginning of 2012 the collection contained over 1,600 texts (around 65,000 pages) and received over 10,000 visits each day.[2]
Projects and activities
The Library works with partners within Victoria University on projects for the NZETC including:
- Turbine, a literary journal (in cooperation with the International Institute of Modern Letters)
- Best New Zealand Poems (in cooperation with the International Institute of Modern Letters)
- Tidal Pools, to make available texts on Pacific islands history, language, culture and politics (in cooperation with Va'aomanu Pasifika, the Pacific Studies unit)
- Design Review, a Wellington architecture and design magazine from the late 1940s and early 1950s
The NZETC has previously worked with external partners, such as:
- Digitisation and e-publishing of the Transactions and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New Zealand 1868–1961 (in cooperation with the National Library of New Zealand and the Alexander Turnbull Library)
- Learning Media (in cooperation with the Ministry of Education)
- La Trobe Journal (in cooperation with the Australian State Library of Victoria)[3]
Copyrights
When original texts are out of copyright NZETC provides the digitised version under a Creative Commons Share-alike License (currently CC BY SA 3.0 NZ).[4]
Methodology and technology
The NZETC is a part of the Text Encoding Initiative community of practice. They encode all their textual content in TEI XML which is transformed dynamically into HTML using XSL.[5] Authority files are maintained for works, people, places and, unusually, ships.[6] Topic Maps are used for the main website structure.
References
- ↑ "NZETC.org Site Info". Alexa Internet. Retrieved 2012-03-16.
- ↑ About NZETC on the official website
- ↑ "About the NZETC projects". Nzetc.victoria.ac.nz. Retrieved 2012-07-30.
- ↑ "About copyrights". nzetc.victoria.ac.nz.
- ↑ "http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-NZETC-About-technology.html". Nzetc.victoria.ac.nz. 2005-05-05. Retrieved 2012-07-30. External link in
|title=
(help) - ↑ "http". Authority.nzetc.org/. Retrieved 2012-07-30.
External links
- Official website
- NZETC Blog
- Turbine
- Best New Zealand Poems
- Kotare
- Tidal Pools
- Transactions and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New Zealand 1868–1961
- La Trobe Journal