Friday, February 25, 2011

kindle editions of the codices... i wonder...

I was planning on covering each codex with a post of its own... with links to WorldCat records and some background info for each, when i came across Amazon's kindle editions of 10 codices in digital format.


Codex Tonalamatl Aubin


And then i did a little more digging and found the books on smashwords too... And then found it's the same guy - jason merkoski, from oscura press... He claims he's a technology evangelist, for Amazon... whats a TE anyway?


So I bought it - because the price was right and you can open Kindle books on your PC now... and then I started thinking the images looked familiar....

So i did a little more digging - and it turns out this merkoski guy had downloaded all the images for these books from a free web source, FAMSI the Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies, packaged them into a kindle edition, and is now selling it for .99 cents a pop and up. I guess its the american way - but is it the the native american way?



Here's the link to the Codex Tonalamatl Aubin on FAMSI - oh and the resolution is better than the kindle edition, as well.


but what about fair use and value adding - you may say? well, heres an excerpt from the "value" he's added to the hard work FAMSI did in digitizing these masterpieces and making them available to researchers.


"Any of these symbols on any of the codex pages could earn you a great tattoo – and it’s somehow a surprise that lines so bold never graved a person’s skin. And I hope that hipsters of a more feral age will start inking themselves with these living patterns. Because they are alive. They beat with blood, life, something all too familiar, and something so strangerous that you’ll never understand it."


tattooed feral hipsters? strangerous indeed!

Thursday, February 24, 2011

revisiting my master's thesis... for a good cause

Having been subjected to countless inter-library loan requests, I decided I would expand on some of the scholarship I undertook at Queens College and test the limits of the inter-library loan system of the Queens Library myself.

My master's thesis was an annotated bibliography which which surveyed the print and digital facsimiles available for Pre-Columbian codices of the ancient Maya and Aztec cultures.

The bibliography sought to track the digitization of these rare and out-of-print publications, and how readily available they might be to the 21st century reader...

Here is a list of the codices covered in my annotated bibliography, to be followed by an updated version with the links to the WorldCat bibliographic records for each edition...


Aubin
Azcatitlan
Azoyu
Baranda
Barberini (Bandianus)
Becker no. I
Becker no. I / II
Bodley
Borbonicus
Borgia
Chimalpopoca
Colombino
Cospi
Dresden (Dresdensis)
Egerton (Sanchez Solis)
en Cruz
Fejervary-Mayer
Florentine
Grolier
Hall
Ixtlilxochitl
Laud
Madrid (Tro-Cortesianus)
Magliabechiano
Mariano Jimenez
Mexicanus
Osuna
Paris (Peresianus)Perez / Chilam Balam of Mani
Selden
Telleriano-Remensis
Tlatelolco
Tudela
Vaticanus A (Rios0
Vaticanus B
Vienna (Vindobonensis)
Xolotl
Zouche-Nuttall
Gomesta Manuscript
Tovar Calendar
Tonalamatl Aubin

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

3 minutes of fame...

i was written up in a paper for plugging our centennial celebration at the Woodside Library!


who says outreach is dead?

it was probably a breath of fresh air to people used to the controversies of whether or not to allow a porch to be renovated on a historically landmarked building...

and who doesn't like cake? it was an easy sell...