Become part of history: email the British library
LONDON, May 3 (Reuters) - Blunders, romance and tales from far-flung places which find their way into email users' inboxes could soon be archived alongside the stirring speeches of Churchill and the works of Shakespeare.
The British Library, home to some of the world's most historic documents, has asked Britons to forward all manner of emails to create what it says will be the first email archive.
British Library Curator of Sociolinguistics and Education Jonnie Robinson said that the prevalence of email as a form of correspondence led the library to decide it should capture a wide-ranging sample of this 21st century phenomenon.
"It's a fantastic way to preserve British culture," Robinson told Reuters. "It's kind of like an electronic time capsule."
The British Library, which preserves documents such as William Shakespeare's first work, the Magna Carta, polar explorer Robert Scott's diary and the letters of author Jane Austen, bills itself as "the world's knowledge" and holds more than 13 million books, 57 million patents, three million sound recordings and 920,000 journal and newspaper titles.
"Email Britain will allow us to archive a vast snapshot of our present-day email communications and will be of great value for future researchers," John Tuck, the head of collections, said in a statement.
Emails should be submitted under one of the following categories which should be typed into the subject box of the email: Blunders, Life Changing Emails, Complaints, Spam, Love and Romance, Humour, Everyday Emails, News, World Around You, Tales from Abroad.
"Digital archiving of email has never been attempted before on this scale and we're very excited to be capturing such a rich slice of contemporary life," Tuck said. Continued...




