The Shakespeare and Company Project is one of the longest-running projects at the Center for Digital Humanities at Princeton (CDH). Based on archival materials from the Sylvia Beach Papers at Princeton’s Firestone Library, the project recreates the world of the Lost Generation by detailing what members of Beach’s lending library read and where they lived. The full site launched May 2020, and data on library members, books, and events will be published soon.
The Shakespeare and Company Project is an exemplar of CDH’s commitment to critical adoption of best practices (Koeser, 2019) and innovation in custom software. Our process leverages rigorous testing, including unit testing (over 95% coverage for Python code), automated accessibility testing with pa11y, and manual feature and usability testing. As a project with both popular and scholarly appeal, we’ve designed a site that foregrounds the complex detail and idiosyncrasy of Beach’s record-keeping practices, but is welcoming and accessible, and also fully responsive on mobile devices. Through collaborative and iterative data modeling, we developed a relational database that allowed the research team to aggregate data , which helped to identify and disambiguate members, and to associate events from different archival sources. This project also includes a sophisticated solution for storing and querying partially-known dates in a SQL database (Koeser, 2019).
Our lightning talk will demonstrate aspects of the public interface as well as the administrative backend, provide a brief overview of the published data, and discuss some of the scholarly and technical challenges we encountered.
References
Shakespeare and Company Project. Center for Digital Humanities, Princeton University, 2020. https://shakespeareandco.princeton.edu/.
“Data Export.” Shakespeare and Company Project, version 1.1.0. Center for Digital Humanities, Princeton University. April 13, 2020. http://shakespeareandco.princeton.edu/about/data/. Accessed June 15, 2020.
Koeser, Rebecca Sutton, Nick Budak, Gissoo Doroudian, Benjamin W. Hicks, and Xinyi Li. 2020. Princeton-CDH/mep-django: v1.0. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3834179.
Koeser, Rebecca Sutton. 2019. “Best Practices?” Panel “The State of Digital Humanities Software Development.” presented at the ACH2019, Pittsburgh, July 26. https://rlskoeser.github.io/2019/07/26/best-practices/.
Koeser, Rebecca Sutton. 2019. “Coding with Unknowns.” Center for Digital Humanities at Princeton University. December 5, 2019. https://cdh.princeton.edu/updates/2019/12/05/coding-unknowns/.