Digital Himalaya

Digital Himalaya project logo. Two blue mountains with Digital Himalaya written at the bottom.
Logo of the Digital Himalaya project

The Digital Himalaya project was established in December 2000 by Mark Turin, Alan Macfarlane, Sara Shneiderman, and Sarah Harrison.[1] The project's principal goal is to collect and preserve historical multimedia materials relating to the Himalaya, such as photographs, recordings, and journals, and make those resources available over the internet and offline, on external storage media. The project team have digitized older ethnographic collections and data sets that were deteriorating in their analogue formats, so as to protect them from deterioration and make them available and accessible to originating communities in the Himalayan region and a global community of scholars.[1]

The project was founded at the Department of Anthropology of the University of Cambridge, moved to Cornell University in 2002 (when a collaboration with the University of Virginia was initiated), and then back to the University of Cambridge in 2005. From 2011 to 2014, the project was jointly hosted between the University of Cambridge and Yale University. In 2014, the project moved to the University of British Columbia, where it is presently located, and maintains a distant collaboration with Sichuan University.[2]

  1. ^ a b Turin, Mark (2021-02-14). "The Digital Himalaya Project: Collection, Protection & Connection". Visualizing Objects, Places, and Spaces: A Digital Project Handbook. doi:10.21428/51bee781.028ec770.
  2. ^ cf Digital Himalaya website http://www.digitalhimalaya.com/overview.php