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Announcement
November 14, 2006
The University of Virginia Library Joins the Google Books Library
Project
Today, Google welcomes its newest partner - the University of Virginia
Library - to the Google Books Library Project. Built by Thomas
Jefferson, one of the founding fathers of the United States, the U.Va.
Library carries a wealth of early American historical material among its
rich collections.
Google will digitize hundreds of thousands of books from the Library,
including selected portions of the Library's American history,
literature, and humanities works collections, and make them searchable
online through Google Book Search. With 13 physical locations as well
as the original Rotunda, the Library contains more than five million
volumes, 17 million manuscripts, rare books and archives, and
rapidly-growing digital collections.
For scholars and readers all over the world, this offers even more
access to the great works of history and culture. By simply searching
online, researchers across the globe can discover books held on the
shelves of the U.Va. Library, including a broad range of materials from
American literature to Buddhist studies.
"This is an historic moment," said University President John T. Casteen
III. "When Jefferson designed the University, he placed the library at
its center -- both physically and academically. Reading and the quest
for knowledge were all-important to him. Reaching out into the world --
what we now call Globalization -- was central to his vision of what an
American university must do to promote the knowledge that sustains
personal freedom. To have the library that is the clearest single emblem
of this vision now assume a role in a vast, international digital
library has special meaning here. It puts a distinctly contemporary
meaning to our founder's dream of making knowledge accessible to all
people."
Anyone will be able to freely view, browse and read U.Va.'s books in the
public domain. For books protected by copyright, scholars searching on
Book Search will be able to see the basic background of relevant books
(such as the title and the author's name), and at most a few lines of
text related to their search. They can also find information about
where they can buy or borrow a book.
The University of Virginia becomes the latest partner in the Google
Books Library Project, which also includes the University of California,
Harvard University, University Complutense of Madrid, University of
Michigan, the New York Public Library, Oxford University, Stanford
University and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Google is also
conducting a pilot project with the Library of Congress.
The Google Books Library Project digitizes books from major libraries
around the world and makes their collections searchable on Google Book
Search. More information can be found at: http://books.google.com.
Also see today's blog post on the Google Book Search about the
announcement: http://booksearch.blogspot.com/. |