<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title type="full"><title type="main">Prototyping the SF Nexus</title><title type="sub">Collaborative Models for Digitizing and Curating Speculative Fiction Collections as Data</title></title></titleStmt><author><persName><surname>Wermer-Colan</surname><forename>Henry Alexander</forename></persName><affiliation>Temple University, United States of America</affiliation><email>alex.wermer-colan@temple.edu</email></author><author><persName><surname>Mulligan</surname><forename>Rikk</forename></persName><affiliation>Carnegie Mellon University, United States of America</affiliation><email>rikk@cmu.edu</email></author><editionStmt><edition><date>43845</date></edition></editionStmt><publicationStmt><publisher>Name, Institution</publisher><address><addrLine>Street</addrLine><addrLine>City</addrLine><addrLine>Country</addrLine><addrLine>Name</addrLine></address></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><p>Converted from an OASIS Open Document</p></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><appInfo><application ident="DHCONVALIDATOR" version="1.22"><label>DHConvalidator</label></application></appInfo></encodingDesc><profileDesc><textClass><keywords scheme="ConfTool" n="category"><term>Paper</term></keywords><keywords scheme="ConfTool" n="subcategory"><term>Long Presentation</term></keywords><keywords scheme="ConfTool" n="keywords"><term>Science Fiction</term><term>Digital Collections</term><term>Cultural Analytics</term></keywords><keywords scheme="ConfTool" n="topics"><term>Europe</term><term>English</term><term>North America</term><term>19th Century</term><term>20th Century</term><term>Contemporary</term><term>cultural analytics</term><term>digital libraries creation, management, and analysis</term><term>Book and print history</term><term>Literary studies</term></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><p>This paper overviews the SF Nexus prototype, the developmental stage of a research project to digitize and curate available works of Anglo-American speculative fiction. This resource enables access to texts in the public domain and under copyright, from magazines to mass-market novels. We overview challenges confronting scholars of SF book history, including restricted access to and the uncatalogued materials in special collections, copyright barriers to sharing digital texts, and the lack of comprehensive indices to SF texts and their publication records. The presentation will present models for multi-institutional, collaborative mass digitization efforts to ingest into HathiTrust, share across research centers and libraries, and curate on the web with user-friendly, embeddable tools for the cultural analytics of books as image and text data. We conclude by proposing our coalition as a collaborative model for similar digitization and curation projects requiring standardized policies, legal agreements, and data curation workflows.</p></body></text></TEI>