Google Cultural Institute – Bringing History to Life

Published: 
2012

Source: Google Cultural Institute

 

This week Google has made available 42 new online historical exhibitions telling the stories behind major events of the last century, including Apartheid, D-Day and the Holocaust. The stories have been put together by 17 partners including museums and cultural foundations who have drawn on their archives of letters, manuscripts, first-hand video testimonials and much more. Much of the material is very moving—and some is on the Internet for the first time at the Google Cultural Institute.

 

Each exhibition features a narrative which links the archive material together to unlock the different perspectives, nuances and tales behind these events. Among others you’ll see:

  • Tragic Love at Auschwitz - the story of Edek & Mala, a couple in love who try to escape Auschwitz
  • Jan Karski, Humanity’s Hero - first-hand video testimony from the man who attempted to inform the world about the existence of the Holocaust
  • Faith in the Human Spirit is Not Lost - tracing the history of Yad Vashem’s efforts to honor courageous individuals who attempted to rescue Jews during the Holocaust
  • Steve Biko - a 15-year-old’s political awakening in the midst of the Apartheid movement featuring nine documents never released in the public domain before
  • D-Day - details of the famous landings including color photographs, personal letters and the D-Day order itself from Admiral Ramsay

Visitors to the virtual exhibits can zoom in to see photos in great detail and search through millions of items for a specific country, person, event or date. The site also provides visitors with tools to allow them explore different relationships between the various exhibits and artifacts. Watch this video for some guidance about how to find your way around the exhibitions.

 

Previously the Cultural Institute made its Art Project, World Wonders and the Nelson Mandela Archives available online. It also digitized the Dead Sea Scrolls.

 

Google is working closely with museums, foundations and other archives around the world to make more cultural and historical material accessible online and by doing so preserve it for future generations.

Updated: Oct. 30, 2012
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