《纽约客》完整档案现已完全数字化。
The entire New Yorker archive is now digitized

原始链接: https://www.newyorker.com/news/press-room/the-entire-new-yorker-archive-is-now-fully-digitized

## 《纽约客》档案现已完全数字化 几十年来,《纽约客》读者一直面临着挑战,即翻阅堆积如山的旧刊——约翰·麦克菲曾以这种方式在独木舟上津津有味。现在,这段历史已全部在线提供。 《纽约客》已将其数字档案扩展到包含来自 4000 多期杂志的 10 万多篇文章,涵盖了苏珊·奥利安对超市的观察,以及约翰·厄普代克的虚构作品等内容。 该档案拥有庞大的馆藏:超过 31,000 篇“城中谈话”文章,2,400 篇“大型报道”专题文章,以及数千首诗歌、故事和信件。增强的搜索功能,包括人工智能驱动的摘要,有助于浏览这些丰富的内容,即使标题令人费解。 值《纽约客》庆祝成立一百周年之际,扩展的档案提供了一个独特的机会,可以探索一个世纪的深刻写作,供订阅用户无限访问。虽然数字设备可能无法像纸质刊物一样在水中幸存,但档案的便利性和范围是不可否认的。

## 《纽约客》档案现已数字化 《纽约客》杂志的整个档案现已数字化并在线提供,这一项目被许多人誉为一项重大成就。它允许对文章进行全文搜索和交叉链接,超越了之前主要提供扫描图像的尝试。 讨论强调了该杂志持久的品质和极少的广告,使其成为一本独特的出版物。用户回忆起过去难以访问的数字版本(如DVD),因为技术已经过时。人们对档案的潜在用途感到兴奋,包括研究项目,例如绘制纽约市事件地点随时间变化的情况,以及将内容提供给人工智能进行分析。 克服的关键挑战是获得数字出版权,因为原始合同并未预料到互联网。虽然一些人希望能够下载档案(例如PDF的tarball),但当前数字化版本因其可搜索性和格式保留而受到称赞。
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原文

In the introduction to “The New Yorker Index 1992,” a twenty-page catalogue of everything the magazine published that year, the staff writer John McPhee acknowledged a ritual familiar to many New Yorker readers: tackling a stack of unread issues. Instead of catching up at home, he’d schlep his copies up to New Hampshire and read in the middle of a lake, while lying in a canoe. With those issues dispatched, he’d call the New Yorker office and ask the librarian for help locating other stories he wanted to read: “Hello, Helen, in what issue did [the staff writer Thomas] Whiteside tee up the American latex tomato? Whose was the thing about the grass at Wimbledon?” (The thing was McPhee’s, of course.)

Exploring past New Yorker pieces is now a lot easier (and more portable). As of this week, our full archive is available to read at newyorker.com. On top of what was previously accessible, we’ve added more than a hundred thousand articles from more than four thousand issues, a stack hefty enough to sink your canoe. Not only is everything from the 1992 index accounted for—Susan Orlean on the inner workings of a supermarket, Talk of the Town stories about “urinals (art)” and “urinals (not art)”—but also John Updike’s 1961 short story “A & P” and Calvin Tomkins’s Profile of Marcel Duchamp. There’s work by Jorge Luis Borges and Susan Sontag, Ralph Ellison and Louise Glück. There are articles about Frank Sinatra and Michael Jordan, royals and rock stars, cowboys and clowns. All in all, there are more than thirty-one thousand Talk of the Town stories; twenty-four hundred Reporter at Large pieces; more than thirteen thousand works of fiction and fourteen thousand poems; three thousand Letters from everywhere, from Abu Dhabi to Zimbabwe; and fifteen hundred “Annals of” everything, from “haberdashery” to “veterinary medicine.”

While the complete digital archive may not have the same charm as magazines piled on the nightstand, there is now a single home for every issue—a place to peruse covers, scan tables of contents, and choose what to read next. Better still, if you don’t happen to have the phone number of our librarian, upgraded search capabilities allow you to hunt down “Whiteside” or “Wimbledon,” “vaping” or “vampires,” and sort results by date of publication. We’ve also made use of A.I. to add short summaries where they didn’t previously appear, making it easier to discern what an article is about. (This is, after all, a magazine in which the headline “Measure for Measure” might lead to an essay not on Shakespeare’s comedy but on the rise of the metric system.)

The magazine’s centenary celebrations, which kicked off in February, provide a wonderful occasion to get reacquainted with our rich history. Whether you are looking for something specific, going down a rabbit hole, or simply catching up, the newly expanded archive is designed to make a hundred years of writing more accessible than ever. Subscribers enjoy unlimited access; if you aren’t a subscriber yet, become one today.

We’ll continue to highlight some of our past favorites in the Classics newsletter, on our home page, and elsewhere, but consider this an open invitation to dive into the archive on your own. If you do choose to read on the water, please be careful—an iPad dropped overboard won’t hold up quite as well as a copy of the print magazine. ♦

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