Decommissioning Making Publics

Over the past month or so I've had to prepare for the coming expiration of the makingpublics.org domain. Though the project officially concluded in 2010, a remainder of funds was allocated to re-imagine its website, and see whether discussions could continue. In short, though we received some traffic initially, and some requests for new user accounts over the years, the new site did not take of on its own. Nevertheless the work done on it acted as a good leaping point for the new NanoHistory site which launched this last fall. When I arrived at McGill to take up my position as a postdoc and webmaster for MaPs, I made it a priority to archive and preserve the work of my predecessor, Jen Drou
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Thinking about Names

Building parsers for Nanohistory has involved quite a bit of thinking about what's in a name. I'm going to leave organizations, places, and things and outline how I've approached the issue for prosopographical data. Let's get some basics out of the way first - just so we're clear on what's going on. A "name" is essentially a label; whether it as attached to anything in particular is secondary in practical terms. In short, a name is a descriptor for something that can exist in reality or be completely fictive. This is important to note because unlike a cataloguer in a repository, historical scholars are interested in the movement and shaping of identities: names are the lynchpins, but do not
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