LIBRARIES AND THE ASSAULT ON PAPER 上市 Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 4, Number 17, April 22, 2001, Article 7

    NEW BOOK: LIBRARIES AND THE ASSAULT ON PAPER

    Stephen Pradier, Tom Fort, and others all pointed out the
    release of a new book that is a call to arms for bibliophiles,
    researchers, and historians. "Double Fold : Libraries and the
    Assault on Paper" by Nicholson Baker is "an outraged, bitterly
    funny indictment of how our country's most august libraries have
    systematically trashed older books and newspapers. With a
    few notable exceptions, the librarians we meet in the book aren't
    the prudent, book-nuzzling custodians we'd expect to find at the
    National Archives and major university libraries; instead, they're
    efficiency-minded technophiles who wantonly destroyed original
    texts and replaced them with badly filmed, unreliable facsimiles.

    As a result, the original copies of many newspaper runs and
    books are gapped or gone, while their microfilm replacements,
    imperfect to begin with, are melting and yellowing. Newer,
    more sophisticated duplication efforts, such as digital scanning,
    are stymied before they even start: The microfilms are too poor
    to copy from, and the originals have already been destroyed.

    This is because, in the library biz, what's called "preservation"
    is actually destructive. (If you want to talk about the literal
    repair of books, the term is "conservation.") To microfilm a
    text is to ruin it: The volume is gutted like a fish so that its
    sheaves may be easily fed into the camera, and the
    disemboweled result is usually sold or dumped." [from
    commentary in the online magazine Slate:
    http://slate.msn.com/code/BookClub/BookClub.asp,
    forwarded by Stephen Pradier.

    From the Publisher: "Since the 1950s, our country’s greatest
    libraries have, as a matter of common practice, dismantled their
    collections of original bound newspapers and so-called brittle
    books, replacing them with microfilmed copies. The marketing
    of the brittle-paper crisis and the real motives behind it are the
    subject of this passionately argued book, in which Nicholson
    Baker pleads the case for saving our recorded heritage in its
    original form while telling the story of how and why our greatest
    research libraries betrayed the public trust by auctioning off or
    pulping irreplaceable collections. The players include the
    Library of Congress, the CIA, NASA, microfilm lobbyists,
    newspaper dealers, and a colorful array of librarians and digital
    futurists, as well as Baker himself — who eventually discovers
    that the only way to save one important newspaper is to buy it.
    Double Fold is an intense, brilliantly worded narrative that is
    sure to provoke discussion and controversy."

    Book Excerpt: "The British Library's newspaper collection
    occupies several buildings in Colindale, north of London, near
    a former Royal Air Force base that is now a museum of aviation.
    On October 20, 1940, a German airplane — possibly
    mistaking the library complex for an aircraft-manufacturing plant
    — dropped a bomb on it. Ten thousand volumes of Irish and
    English papers were destroyed; fifteen thousand more were
    damaged. Unscathed, however, was a very large foreign-
    newspaper collection, including many American titles: thousands
    of fifteen-pound brick-thick folios bound in marbled boards,
    their pages stamped in red with the British Museum's crown-and-
    lion symbol of curatorial responsibility.

    Bombs spared the American papers, but recent managerial
    policy has not — most were sold off in a blind auction in the fall
    of 1999. One of the library's treasures was a seventy-year run,
    in about eight hundred volumes, of Joseph Pulitzer's exuberantly
    polychromatic newspaper, the New York World. Pulitzer
    discovered that illustrations sold the news; in the 1890s, he
    began printing four-color Sunday supplements and splash-panel
    cartoons. The more maps, murder-scene diagrams, ultra-wide
    front-page political cartoons, fashion sketches, needlepoint
    patterns, children's puzzles, and comics that Pulitzer published,
    the higher the World's sales climbed; by the mid-nineties, its
    circulation was the largest of any paper in the country. William
    Randolph Hearst moved to New York in 1895 and copied
    Pulitzer's innovations and poached his staff, and the war
    between the two men created modern privacy-probing,
    muckraking, glamour-smitten journalism. A million people a
    day once read Pulitzer's World; now an original set is a good
    deal rarer than a Shakespeare First Folio or the Gutenberg Bible.

    Besides the World, the British Library also possessed one of
    the last sweeping runs of the sumptuous Chicago Tribune —
    about 1,300 volumes, reaching from 1888 to 1958, complete
    with bonus four-color art supplements on heavy stock from
    the 1890s ("This Paper is Not Complete Without the Color
    Illustration" says the box on the masthead); extravagant layouts
    of illustrated fiction; elaborately hand-lettered ornamental
    headlines; and decades of page-one political cartoons by John
    T. McCutcheon. The British Library owned, as well, an
    enormous set of the San Francisco Chronicle (one of perhaps
    two that are left..)."

    [Editor's note: This gutting of our libraries has been in full
    swing for many years. My interest in contemporary accounts
    of coinage in America led me, over time, to purchase a large
    number of old newspapers containing such content. I published
    many of these in a book draft and on my web site
    (http://www.coinlibrary.com). I naturally asked myself the
    question, "Where are these dealers getting all this stuff?", and the
    answer was that libraries had been deaccessioning newspapers
    for some time, boosting a cottage industry of paper and
    ephemera dealers who buy and remarket the papers to
    collectors.

    One dealer who contacted me was remarketing a partial set
    of London-based Gentleman's Mazagine, vol 1 (1731) to vol 71
    (1801). I purchased from him a set of virtually all numismatically-

    related articles published in the magazine during those years,
    which included several items related to American numismatics.
    I shudder at the thought of someone dismembering a set of this
    important journal, but a number of personal libraries were
    enriched as a result (as was the seller, no doubt).]

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  • 2001-04-22
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