Associated With
For the National Museum collection four Types were found to be sufficient to organi
Master
Theme
Category
Story
As we've seen these are categories to which we assign individual narratives, organi
The Types are in a broad hierarchical arrangement starting with a unique Master
narrative at the highest level that presents the collection as a whole. In this example, the master narrative is called The Museum's Collections
:
The Theme
Type in our example is a broad departmental or discipline description, such as:
Fine Art & Sculpture
Science & Technology
Zoology
History of Music
The next level of grouping is the Category
, a more narrow collection of narratives. In our example the Zoology Theme
has six categories:
Marine Invertebrates
Fish
Mammals
Reptiles
Insects
Dinosaurs
The lowest level of our four Types is the Story
, a discrete narrative about some thing (object in the collection) or collection of things (related objects).
It is important to keep in mind that although we have four Types, we are not limited to four levels in our hierarchy. Any single branch could have many more than four. Or less. As we've seen, the Type mainly serves to group narratives: how narratives are displayed on the website is determined by the relationships we establish between individual narratives (regardless of their Type). How you associate narratives will depend on the needs of your collection.
For instance, the History of Music
narrative has a Type of Theme
. If we only had a few discrete narratives relating to this theme, we might give them a Type of Story
and associate this History of Music
narrative directly with them (i.e. without any intermediary grouping narratives with a Category
Type).
However, the Insects
narrative, which also has a Type of Theme
, could have a narrative for each of the 29 Orders of Insects. Each of these would have a Category
Type. Some of these might point to further groupings of narratives (which would also have a Category
Type) and so on. Eventually a Category
narrative will point to narratives with a Story
Type and the journey through this branch of the collection will come to an end.
Note: It's worth stressing again that the depth of any branch of your hierarchy is determined by the relationships made from one narrative to another, not the narratives' Type.
Example: The National Museum website
So how does it look on the website and in the Narratives module?
From the home page of The National Museum website we find an option to browse the collections:
If we select the browse collection link (top right of the screen), our journey through the narratives begins and we are taken to a page that draws material from the unique Master
narrative, The Museum's Collections
:
As we can see from the Summary tab of The Museum's Collections
record, the graphic and text that display on this page are drawn directly from this narrative record (the graphic is added on the Multimedia tab and the text is entered on the Narrative tab):
Before we continue our journey through the National Museum's website, this is a good opportunity to raise once more the question about a need to control how text is formatted in the Narratives module: any formatting of text on the Narrative tab will be reflected on the website and presented to the world! For instance if someone decided to format the name of The National Museum as follows:
it would be reflected in all its formatting glory on the website:
Back to our journey through the narratives.
If we click the Expand button beside the Themes title, a list of narratives displays:
First, let's take a look at the Narratives record for The Museum's Collections
:
As we see, the eleven narratives that display on the web page above have been associated with this record:
- The order in which they are listed on the Associations tab is the order in which they display on the web page.
We can change this order simply by selecting the number for a row and dragging it to another position.
For example, if we drag Science & Technology from the second to the first row:
and refresh the website, we find the order of narratives has also changed:
- The introductory text that displays for each narrative link is taken from its narrative record and, in this case, has been abbreviated to a certain number of characters. The full narrative text displays when we select the link.
- For this page the title that displays above the list of narratives is Themes, which we will recall is the plural of one of the Narrative Types.
This title is based on the first Narratives record listed in the Associated Narratives table of the record for
The Museum's Collection
(Science & Technology
in the last two screenshots). In this case, all of them have a Narrative Type ofTheme
.As we know, it is possible to associate any record with any other record. Therefore, if we were to associate a record of Type
Story
withThe Museum's Collection
and move it to the top of the Associated Narratives table:the label for this page would change to Stories:
- You will notice also that it is possible to override the abbreviated text that displays by adding text to the Comment cell of the Associated With: (Associated Narratives) table (if you missed that, take a look at the previous screenshot of the Narratives module).
As we see above, one of the Theme
narratives listed is Zoology. If we select this, we are taken to its page. Here we find the full text of the Zoology narrative, and a list of all its associated narratives:
In this case all of the associated narratives have a Type of Category
.
If we look at the record for Zoology, we find that The Museum's Collections
is listed as an Associate:
If we select any of the links on the Zoology page, we proceed down another level. If the Dinosaurs link is selected, for instance, we are taken to a page that contains the Dinosaurs narrative material and a list of stories, any one of which will take us to the final level in this branch of the website.
However, don't forget that there is no reason why the levels in this branch couldn't continue if there are appropriate groupings.
For example, if we selected the History of Music narrative at the first level of our website, we would find a listing of narratives with various Types:
- The
Musical Instruments
narrative has aCategory
Type and selecting this link will display a page with a list of narratives of TypeStory.
- The other narratives listed on this page have a
Story
Type and selecting any of these links will display a page that contains their full narrative: