From Catalogue 2.0 to the digital humanities: exploring the future of librari...
Stanford's Revs Digital Library spotlights automobile as cultural icon
1. Stanford's Revs Digital Library spotlights automobile as
cultural icon
By Clifton B. Parker
Stanford University's new Revs Digital Library provides a web-based tour through the world of the
automobile - its past, present and future.
The digital trove is a Stanford University Libraries project for the Revs Program on campus. The new
content comes from the Revs Institute for Automotive Research in Naples, Florida. Thanks to a gift
from Revs Institute president Miles Collier, Stanford Libraries recently launched the online site,
which includes nearly 200,000 images from 12 collections.
New image collections will be added as they are received, digitized and processed, said Gabrielle
Karampelas, the director of communications and development for Stanford University Libraries. The
content will be stored in the Stanford Digital Repository.
Launched in 2011, the Revs Program is a multidisciplinary center dedicated to the study of cars.
Collier said that when his organization looked for a partner to develop a digital library site, they
soon discovered that Stanford Libraries was the best choice.
"Stanford's digital map project and their work in documenting the development of Silicon Valley
were projects we looked to as emblematic of the Stanford University Libraries' ability to help us
achieve our goals," he said.
'Amazing material'
Christina Ann Mesa, a Stanford lecturer in American studies, found the new library invaluable for
her undergraduate course, On the Road: Cars and Auto-Mobility of Race, Gender and Age in
American Literature, a class sponsored by the Revs Program. That class was followed up by a
workshop for students who were interested in doing more car research for a book. The
initial work has now morphed into four different writing projects.
"Students were tasked with finding out more about how the car changed American history, culture,
society and landscape," Mesa said. "Stanford has the great fortune of having the project of digitizing
this amazing material."
Mesa said the car is the single most important invention of the 20th century, as it transformed the
landscape, cities and even culture of America.
Her course explored numerous topics and images, from motoring in London at the dawn of the 20th
century to women drivers and a '20s Bentley photo for F. Scott Fitzgerald's Great Gatsby novel. But
there's much more - Mesa described the archive as immense.
"It will take time to get it all up. I think that is the biggest task. I'd love to see more students having
a hand in the archival work - a great research opportunity that allows students from all disciplines to
2. interact," she said.
"The students enjoyed the interdisciplinary work," she said of the course.
For her research, Mesa found information on car names and colors from the 1940s and
advertisements from every decade, as well as descriptions of the licensing as far back as the 1840s
of horse-drawn hackney carriages, the precursor to motorcar licensing.
Mesa learned through the Revs Institute about a digital copy of the Negro Motorist Green Book,
which was a guidebook for African Americans to find the gas stations that would serve them in the
Jim Crow era, when many gas stations did not serve African Americans.
"That this guide existed was news to me. What a discovery," she said.
Innovation, experimentation
Robert Schwarzwalder, associate university librarian and director of library technologies at
Stanford, said the new site will help faculty and student researchers in a broad range of research
interests in areas such as social and urban studies, design and engineering.
"The early 1900s was a time of rapid innovation and experimentation in the fledgling automotive
industry," said Schwarzwalder. "Just as during the dot-com era of Silicon Valley, this was a period of
radical new ideas and rapid technical innovation."
Schwarzwalder said the biggest challenge in creating the online site was providing access to the
materials in a manner that provided maximum user access while complying with the complexities of
copyright law as it relates to digital materials.
Hearst Publishing Corp. recently transferred its entire archive of Road & Track magazine to
Stanford University Libraries, which will preserve and digitize the collection for future research.
Media Contact
Gabrielle Karampelas, Stanford University Libraries: (650) 497-4414, gkaram@stanford.edu
Clifton B.
For the original article together with any other images or videos, visit the link aboveParker, Stanford
News Service: (650) 725-0224, cbparker@stanford.edu
http://news.stanford.edu/news/2014/september/revs-digital-library-090514.html