Launch of Fürer-Haimendorf Photographic Collection at SOAS
I spent some of Friday at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) for the launch of the Fürer-Haimendorf Photographic Archive, a JISC-sponsored digitisation project that makes available the fantastic collection of photographs of tribal cultures in South Asia and the Himalayas taken by Christoph von Fürer Haimendorf between the 1930s and the 1970s.
This is just the first phase of the rollout, not only of Fürer-Haimendorf’s pictures, but also of many other valuable collections at SOAS. We are pleased and excited to have been able to assist with this endeavour, by customising EPrints to meet the extensive requirements set out for the system by Susannah Rayner and Malcolm Raggett, who are leading the project at SOAS. No less than with Linnean Online, it is a rare privilege to be associated with a project giving a new impetus, and worldwide access, to such invaluable historically important, archival collections.
SOAS organised a fascinating series of lectures on Friday to launch the collection. In one talk, Albert Alban von Stockhausen spoke passionately about the importance of sharing the collection not only with researchers, but also with the communities that Haimendorf visited. Surviving subjects in Nagaland, and their descendants, have been deeply moved on seeing these photos again. Some even refer to their own age in terms of how old they were when Fürer-Haimendorf visited.
Stuart Blackburn talked about Fürer-Haimendorf’s work in the Apatani valley in the 1940s, where he got a rapturous reception, if not as the first westerner to visit them, then probably as only the 5th or 6th, when he acted as an official representative of the British government in India, trying (not always successfully) to resolve tribal disputes. In the photos we can see valuable records of rice-growing, forest-clearance, village-settlement patterns, ritual and warrior practices, and the Apatani villages, with their densely populated, crowded lanes. There are also many individual portraits.
We are particularly pleased with the results. It is an EPrints-based repository which implements the very exacting requirements set out by the SOAS team. It has been an opportunity to develop even further the work Rory has done with EPrints, drawing on our experience adding plugins for bookmarking, tagging and commenting, which began with Linnean Online and continued with SNEEP. We also particularly enjoyed, and benefitted from, working closely with the team from 9Web, who provided graphic designs and meticulous usability testing.
I hope to enumerate the new features and describe the development work in a future post; meanwhile you can see it in action at digital.info.soas.ac.uk.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.




March 1st, 2010 at 11:56 am
The correct name for one of the speakers is Alban von Stockhausen, not “Albert” like in the article.
March 1st, 2010 at 12:06 pm
Apologies Alban. Consider it corrected.