The Culturally Authentic Pictorial Lexicon (CAPL) was created in 2003 by
Michael Shaughnessy and Jason Parkhill at
Washington & Jefferson College in Washington, PA. The initial pilot project created a dictionary database
of over 1,000 unique entries for the German language.
CAPL-German doubled its offerings in April 2005 thanks to numerous
supporters around the globe! For more information on contributing our
pictures, email capl@washjeff.edu.
Our usage policy is simple:
The pictures in this database may be viewed, downloaded, linked,
manipulated, copied, displayed, and redistributed free of charge for
educational non-commercial as specified by the
Creative
Commons license. Please cite CAPL@washjeff.edu as the
source.
Principles of CAPL
Several principles are behind the creation and growth of CAPL. Starting
with German, these principles make CAPL unique and more applicable in
language acquisition that other visual dictionaries
Authenticity: The pictures in CAPL are authentic primary sources,
taken within the language specific context they are found. The pictures
are neither staged nor manipulated to suit.
Language Specific Source Dictionary: CAPL is unique to other
picture collections because the pictures are not merely "street scenes."
Each picture represents a dictionary entry. This entry must originate in
the source language. The translation is secondary to the source and
sometimes may not officially exist according to standard orthographic
authorities.
Objective Depiction: The object depicted must be easily understood
without a caption. In doing this, mostly nouns will constitute this
database. The subjectivity of a visual representation for adjectives such
as "beautiful" creates linguistic, political, racial, economic,
philosophical, etc. : problems that the creators of CAPL would like to
avoid. Also, no derogatory nouns will be depicted in CAPL.
No absolute representative visual depiction possible: We do not
argue that there can be one picture of a German Markt that totally
encompasses the platonic ideal of German "Market-ness" Nevertheless, if
one picture in one context can assist in understanding of what a German
market is, then it should be included. If a different picture in a
different context adds to another understanding, we are interested in
adding it.
For the construction and expansion of CAPL, the following principles
apply:
Representative Samples: A minimum representative sample is
necessary for the inclusion of a category. Orphan words might not be added
to the database.
Context is crucial: New additions should be provided with a
context. For example, a picture of a ticket machine for busses should be a
ticket machine within a bus. This allows for cultural comparison that may
appear at a later date.
Monitored expansion: Expansion is important, especially to include
regional cultural items, out of the way places or unique cultural entries
that may not be in the database. CAPL gladly adds pictures that are not
represented, but all submissions undergo an editorial process. We are not
interested in thirty depictions of one item / place unless warranted.
Contact:
Editor in Chief
Michael Shaughnessy, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of German
Washington & Jefferson College
60 South Lincoln St.
Washington, PA 15301
724-223-6170
CAPL@washjeff.edu
Technical Director
Jason Parkhill
Associate Director for Academic Technology
Washington & Jefferson College
60 South Lincoln St.
Washington, PA 15301
Associate Editor
Nikhil Sathe, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of German
Ohio University
There are currently 2,604 active records in CAPL
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