Item description
A screenshot of a webpage with black text and a white background. At the top left corner is the name of the website, “COVID-19 signage archive”; and at the top right are links to different sections of the website, titled “about”, “map”, “tags”, and “upload”. In the far right corner is a search bar. A thin line separates the top from the webpage content. There is a long list of tags, with a number next to each tag to designate how many signs have been posted with each tag. The tags list languages, whether a sign was hand-written, and what the sign pertains to in regards to rules and regulations. Towards the bottom of the page are tag definitions for words such as “closures”, “distancing”, “emoji”, “floor marker”, “governmental”, “hand-written”, “limits”, “masks”, “sanitizing”, “symptoms”, “typos”.
Image | 1970
COVID-19 Signage Archive 4
Eli Fessler
The COVID-19 Signage Archive, located at https://covid-signage.net/, aims to preserve and invite exploration of the worldwide, physical, pandemic-related messaging that has come into existence beginning in early 2020. The project seeks to archive these ephemera, and to help document the linguistic landscapes of shared concepts such as social/physical distancing, mask-wearing, and hand washing – while simultaneously serving as an accessible dataset/corpus available for linguistic and sociological analysis.