Agnieszka Pieńczak
The Digital Platform of the Polish Ethnographic Atlas - From Idea to Implementation
Číslo: 4/2018
Periodikum: Český lid
DOI: 10.21104/CL.2018.4.05
Klíčová slova: ethnology;Polish Ethnographic Atlas;digitalization;digital archive;cultural heritage;Poland
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Anotace:
With growing frequency, many digitalization projects aimed at the popularization of various issues concerning the so called traditional culture have been implemented in East-Central Europe over the last years. To meet the current needs associated with easy access to ethnological information, the Research Team of the Polish Ethnographic Atlas, functioning within the Faculty of Ethnology and Education (seated in Cieszyn) of the University of Silesia in Katowice, has undertaken an innovative attempt to elaborate, digitalize and provide access to the atlas materials (the deposit of the Institute of Archeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences). Since 2014 at the Faculty of Ethnology and Education in Cieszyn is implemented the project Polski Atlas Etnograficzny - opracowanie naukowe, elektroniczny katalog danych, publikacja zasobów w sieci Internet, etap I / Polish Ethnographic Atlas – scientific elaboration, electronic database, publishing the resources in the Internet, stage I. The Polish Ethnographic Atlas is the only ethnographic archive in Poland the range of which comprises the whole area of the country. The PEA archives are a unique source on the history of rural Poland, collected by ethnographers, ethnologists and folklorists in the second half of the 20th century, however – they are insufficiently disseminated. The presented study is aimed at disseminating the effects of the discussed research project, with special focus on the specificity of the unique digital platform of the PEA, which functions as Cyfrowe Archiwum Polskiego Atlasu Etnograficznego / Digital Archive of the Polish Ethnographic Atlas. Currently, there are three collections of ethnographic data available on the platform: the photographs of the PEA (1954-1971), all published maps (1958-2013) and the PEA questionnaires on folk collecting wild plants for consumption and healing purposes (questionnaires with the numbers I-IV) (1947-1953) - about 13200 objects. All collections are worth sharing as they are of particular historical value for people interested in rural culture and are the most typical of the atlas activity.