Academic literature on the topic 'American Manuscripts Bibliography Catalogues'

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Journal articles on the topic "American Manuscripts Bibliography Catalogues"

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Haji Zeinolabedini, Mohsen. "Comparison of Persian bibliographic records with FRBR." Electronic Library 35, no. 5 (October 2, 2017): 916–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/el-07-2016-0148.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is Identifying the degree of compatibility of the current situation of the Persian bibliographic records (PBRs) with FRBR, as well as identifying the possible approaches and strategies for appropriate application of the model to Persian. The required data were gathered via two checklists were devised for the purpose of this research and each of which was dedicated to “Shahname” and “Nahjolbalaghe”. Also, to determine the characteristics of a suitable functional requirements for bibliographic records (FRBR) model for Iran, 18 implementation projects round the world were surveyed and analysed. Results of the study show that some FRBR requirements were readily available in Persian bibliographic records (PBRs), but in some cases, there are some deficiencies due to some likely reasons, such as lack of commitment to the Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules 2, specifications of the library software structure and neglecting bibliographic and family relations in catalogues. Design/methodology/approach The main goal of this research was to identify the degree of compatibility of the current situation of the PBRs with FRBR, as well as identifying the possible approaches and strategies for appropriate application of the model to Persian records. Research publication was 3,502 records in the National Bibliography of Iran for “Shahname” and “Nahjolbalaghe” of which 365 records were selected using systematic sampling method. Resources types included in the study were books, audio-visual resources, geographical resources, theses, lithographic books, manuscripts and journals. Findings Results of the study also showed that the appropriate method for implementing FRBR in Iran is the comparative model. According to this model, the current records are saved while they are compared to FRBR model, as a result of which, anomalies are identified and resolved. In another part of this research, 16 important challenges that could exist in implementing the model in Iran were identified and introduced. Also, eight characteristics of a suitable implementation model in Iran are introduced. Originality/value FRBR, is a conceptual entity-relationship model, released by IFLA and aimed to determine a minimum level of catalogue functions based on user’s needs. This model consists of four main parts: entities, attributes, relations and user tasks. This research has studied the feasibility of implementing application of the model to Iranian library records. Any research before the present paper (based on PhD thesis) has not been conducted yet in Iran.
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Berger, Sidney E. "American Library Book Catalogues, 1801-1875: A National Bibliography. Robert Singerman." Library Quarterly 67, no. 3 (July 1997): 295–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/629955.

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Blanchet, Marie-Héléne. "Bilan des études sur Théodore Agallianos : 1966-2011." Gleaner 28 (December 30, 2011): 25. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/er.123.

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A REPORT ON STUDIES ABOUT THEODORE AGALLIANOS (1966-2011)<br /><br /><br />C. Patrineles devoted his doctoral thesis to Theodore Agallianos’ life and writings and also edited two of his speeches. In this still authoritative book, he listed all the manuscripts containing Agallianos’ works and all the existing editions. This article provides an update of this information in light of recent studies; it also catalogues the entire bibliography published about Agallianos since 1966.<br /> <br />MARIE-HELENE BLANCHET<br />
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Hoare, Peter. "Book Review: American librar y book catalogues, 1801-1875: a national bibliography." Journal of Librarianship and Information Science 29, no. 1 (March 1997): 47–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/096100069702900108.

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Lizán, Pilar, and Maria Jesús Sánchez. "La Seccion de Arte de la Biblioteca del Centro de Estudios Historicos de Madrid." Art Libraries Journal 15, no. 3 (1990): 33–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0307472200006866.

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The Art Section of the Library of the Centre for Historical Studies in Madrid inherited part of the art library of the former Centro de Estudios Históricos (CEH) and the entire collection of the Instituto de Historia del Arte y Arqueologia ‘Diego Velazquez’. The Art Section is particularly well endowed with monographs on painting from the 15th to the 18th centuries, and on silver, and with guides and catalogues relating to regional art. The collection of periodicals is one of the best of its kind in Madrid. Other notable holdings include the manuscripts of the Catálogos Monumentales Nacionales, a collection of auction catalogues, and a magnificent collection of photographs. The CEH Library has been part of a libraries automation programme, the Programa de Informatización de Bibliotecas del Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (PRIBIC) since 1988, and in 1989 made a start on the retrospective conversion of the catalogue records of the Art Section. The Art Section collaborates with other art libraries in Madrid and contributes data to documentation centres such as ISOC and to the Répertoire d’Art et Archéologie (now succeeded by the Bibliography of the History of Art). Projects currently under consideration include indexing and automating the auction catalogues, and copying the photograph collection onto videodisc.
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Gwara, Scott. "Collections, Compilations, and Convolutes of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscript Fragments in North America before ca. 1900." Fragmentology, no. 3 (December 2020): 73–139. http://dx.doi.org/10.24446/dlll.

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Using evidence drawn from S. de Ricci and W. J. Wilson’s Census of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in the United States and Canada, American auction records, private library catalogues, public exhibition catalogues, and manuscript fragments surviving in American institutional libraries, this article documents nineteenth-century collections of medieval and Renaissance manuscript fragments in North America before ca. 1900. Surprisingly few fragments can be identified, and most of the private collections have disappeared. The manuscript constituents are found in multiple private libraries, two universities (New York University and Cornell University), and one Learned Society (Massachusetts Historical Society). The fragment collections reflect the collecting genres documented in England in the same period, including albums of discrete fragments, grangerized books, and individual miniatures or “cuttings” (sometimes framed). A distinction is drawn between undecorated text fragments and illuminated ones, explained by aesthetic and scholarly collecting motivations. An interest in text fragments, often from binding waste, can be documented from the 1880s.
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Büyüklimanli, Gönül. "The Turkish National Library towards the Future." Alexandria: The Journal of National and International Library and Information Issues 7, no. 2 (August 1995): 77–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/095574909500700202.

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Planning for the Turkish National Library (TNL) began in 1946, and the library was opened in 1948. It outgrew its first building, and in 1983 moved to a new one which contained several new facilities. Its main functions are to collect works produced in and relating to Turkey, to record them and produce bibliographies of them, to establish an information network in Turkey, and to perform a leadership role. The collection numbers 1,500,000 items, including non-book materials; the TNL has two thirds of all Turkish books published in the old script. Last year there were 222,000 users. The library's Bibliographical Institute issues monthly the national bibliography and a bibliography of articles in Turkish periodicals, as well as other bibliographies, and constructs union catalogues. Work on automation started in 1987, and the TNL's computer-based information system, with an OPAC (containing records of a third of the library's stock), information networks and various CD-ROMs, was opened to the public in 1993. Future projects include an online union catalogue of foreign language books, digitization of manuscripts and rare books, a conservation laboratory, and an improved automatic conveyor system. Main barriers to progress are the inadequacy of the Free Copy Act and insufficient numbers and quality of staff.
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8

Lerer, Seth. "Devotion and Defacement: Reading Children's Marginalia." Representations 118, no. 1 (2012): 126–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/rep.2012.118.1.126.

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The study of children's marginalia in manuscripts and printed books enables us to reassess traditional assumptions about bibliography, subjectivity, and the literary imagination in the English and American traditions. Commentaries, signatures, and scribbling defacements—together with fictional representations of young people writing in books—illustrate relationships among canonical authority, playful subversion, commodity value, and archival preservation that all contribute to (and may critique) our current fascination with book history as a discipline.
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9

Iakerson, Semen M. "Hebrew Incunabula in the Russian Researchers’ Publications. Bibliographic Review." Bibliotekovedenie [Russian Journal of Library Science] 70, no. 1 (June 1, 2021): 21–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.25281/0869-608x-2021-1-1-21-34.

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Hebrew incunabula amount to a rather modest, in terms of number, group of around 150 editions that were printed within the period from the late 60s of the 15th century to January 1, 1501 in Italy, Spain, Portugal and Turkey. Despite such a small number of Hebrew incunabula, the role they played in the history of the formation of European printing cannot be overlooked. Even less possible is to overestimate the importance of Hebrew incunabula for understanding Jewish spiritual life as it evolved in Europe during the Renaissance.Russian depositories house 43 editions of Hebrew incunabula, in 113 copies and fragments. The latter are distributed as following: the Institute of Oriental Manuscripts of the Russian Academy of Sciences — 67 items stored; the Russian State Library — 38 items; the National Library of Russia — 7 items; the Jewish Religious Community of Saint Petersburg — 1 item. The majority of these books came in public depositories at the late 19th — first half of the 20th century from private collections of St. Petersburg collectors: Moses Friedland (1826—1899), Daniel Chwolson (1819—1911) and David Günzburg (1857—1910). This article looks into the circumstances of how exactly these incunabula were acquired by the depositories. For the first time there are analysed publications of Russian scholars that either include descriptions of Hebrew incunabula (inventories, catalogues, lists) or related to various aspects of Hebrew incunabula studies. The article presents the first annotated bibliography of all domestic publications that are in any way connected with Hebrew incunabula, covering the period from 1893 (the first publication) to the present. In private collections, there was paid special attention to the formation of incunabula collections. It was expressed in the allocation of incunabula as a separate group of books in printed catalogues and the publication of research works on incunabula studies, which belonged to the pen of collectors themselves and haven’t lost their scientific relevance today.
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Iakerson, Semen M. "Hebrew Incunabula in the Russian Researchers’ Publications. Bibliographic Review." Bibliotekovedenie [Russian Journal of Library Science] 70, no. 1 (June 1, 2021): 21–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.25281/0869-608x-2021-70-1-21-34.

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Hebrew incunabula amount to a rather modest, in terms of number, group of around 150 editions that were printed within the period from the late 60s of the 15th century to January 1, 1501 in Italy, Spain, Portugal and Turkey. Despite such a small number of Hebrew incunabula, the role they played in the history of the formation of European printing cannot be overlooked. Even less possible is to overestimate the importance of Hebrew incunabula for understanding Jewish spiritual life as it evolved in Europe during the Renaissance.Russian depositories house 43 editions of Hebrew incunabula, in 113 copies and fragments. The latter are distributed as following: the Institute of Oriental Manuscripts of the Russian Academy of Sciences — 67 items stored; the Russian State Library — 38 items; the National Library of Russia — 7 items; the Jewish Religious Community of Saint Petersburg — 1 item. The majority of these books came in public depositories at the late 19th — first half of the 20th century from private collections of St. Petersburg collectors: Moses Friedland (1826—1899), Daniel Chwolson (1819—1911) and David Günzburg (1857—1910). This article looks into the circumstances of how exactly these incunabula were acquired by the depositories. For the first time there are analysed publications of Russian scholars that either include descriptions of Hebrew incunabula (inventories, catalogues, lists) or related to various aspects of Hebrew incunabula studies. The article presents the first annotated bibliography of all domestic publications that are in any way connected with Hebrew incunabula, covering the period from 1893 (the first publication) to the present. In private collections, there was paid special attention to the formation of incunabula collections. It was expressed in the allocation of incunabula as a separate group of books in printed catalogues and the publication of research works on incunabula studies, which belonged to the pen of collectors themselves and haven’t lost their scientific relevance today.
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Books on the topic "American Manuscripts Bibliography Catalogues"

1

Henderson, Cathy. Twentieth-century American playwrights: Views of a changing culture : an exhibition catalogue. Austin: Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, The University of Texas at Austin, 1994.

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Cathy, Henderson. Twentieth-century American playwrights: Views of a changing culture : an exhibition catalogue. Austin: Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, The University of Texas at Austin, 1994.

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Rodgers, Mary Columbro. Third access list to the Mary Columbro Rodgers Literary Trust, by subject. [Hyattsville, Md: Open University of America Press], 1998.

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Rodgers, Mary Columbro. First access list to the Mary Columbro Rodgers Literary Trust. [Hyattsville, Md: Open University of America Press], 1994.

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Plunkett, Michael. Afro-American sources in Virginia: A guide to manuscripts. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1990.

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Afro-American sources in Virginia: A guide to manuscripts. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1990.

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DeMott, Robert J. Dave Smith: A literary archive. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Libraries, 2000.

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Gray, David P. Guide to manuscripts. Bismarck, N.D: State Historical Society of North Dakota, North Dakota Heritage Center, State Capitol Grounds, 1985.

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Zaiser, Sally. The Paul Horgan collection of Sally Zaiser. [San Francisco, Calif.]: S. Zaiser, 1988.

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The card catalog of the manuscript collections of the Archives of American Art. Wilmington, Del: Scholarly Resources, 1985.

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