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Showing posts from September, 2010

Research Trip to Marquette

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After getting a late start due to car rental issues, I made it to the Raynor Library at Marquette University, which houses the Catholic Library Association archives. I arrived there to research the life and work of Fr. Simeon Daly, a Benedictine monk who has been one of the most influential Catholic librarians in the U.S. The nice archivists had pulled about fifteen boxes of correspondence, conference programs, and other material that might contain references to the work of Fr. Simeon in CLA. My research will (I hope) be published sometime in the next year or so. So about that I will just put in a plug for archives. If you belong to an organization that generates documentation--consider finding an appropriate archival home for it. I believe archival material will just keep becoming more and more important for research in the coming years. If you are unsure if your possible archive is important, consult a librarian or archivist.  I managed to get in a couple of hours of work be

Wikipedia and democratization of scholarship

I have given a tiny bit of thought to democratization of scholarship and how it fits into the concept of scholarly sustainability, just enough to realize that I'd like to give a lot more attention to the thought (but it is the first week of classes!). Yesterday's article in IHE on Wikipedia for Credit demonstrates so many of the narrow views that are holding up the forward movement of scholarship and need to be debunked. Some people have an overly romanticized view of print encyclopedias. Just go hear a couple of encyclopedia editors talk about the process and you will lose that view forever.  Yes, some encyclopedia articles are written by the great thinkers in the field, others are sloughed off to any student they can get to work on it. Sometimes writers for encyclopedias show extreme bias; sometimes they cannot be bothered with doing any updating of the subject they are assigned. Print encyclopedia articles need to be evaluated just as much as Wikipedia!Librarians teach thi

A Theological Librarian's Trip to London--Part 2

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Back to London and another day. Well, every librarian likes to stumble on books where they least expect them and it was a surprise to me to find books at the Wallace Collection , “a family collection, and national museum.” I chanced on this small museum which is the collection of five generations of collectors, four Marquesses of Hertford and Sir Richard Wallace, housed in their family home near Oxford Street. Not only was it rather a surprise to see Hals’ The Laughing Cavalier and Watteau’s The Swing, but there were really books in the bookcases in the library of the home.   I am guessing that some of the books have been changed over the years, well, I know it—the 1911 Britan nica and the Diderot and d'Alembert's Encyclopédie were in the cabinets, along with the Mémoires secrets of Bachaumont . The Wallace Collection has an amazing collection of furniture and other objects that being to Marie-Antoinette. Apparently one of the Marquess of Hertford’s had the forethought to

Journal Prices and Seminaries

Not long ago I read with interest, Meredith Farkas' blog on "Is Ebsco the New Evil Empire? " I think this week, Sage Publications has maybe topped Ebsco for this prize position for theological librarians. A thread on the ATLANTIS listserv, which is comprised of theological librarians, has lamented the takeover (note: the Sage envelope containing the bad news to each of us actually says "takeover letter") of two journals this week by Sage resulting in prices being raised--double for one and triple for another. I not only lament the raising of prices, but a certain lack of understanding of mission. (This is not Sage's fault--their mission is to make money.) In my paper at ATLA (which, btw, is available if you are a member as a pre-print on the ATLA Sharepoint site) I said that journal prices rising in all disciplines is unsustainable, but for theology and religion there is another dimension--if we are supposed to be bringing the reign of God (and I think scho