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Re: [ARSCLIST] Curatorial Responsibility, formerly Copyright of treasures



At 11:27 AM 10/6/2005, Karl Miller wrote:

A notion which is increasingly having institutions refuse to accept
collections that come without endowments to cover the preservation
costs... Plus, as we have read in the pages of the NY Times, museums and
such compromising the trust of donors, and the public by selling off
materials...in the name of keeping the museum, archive...etc. functioning.


What about the sell-off and destruction of many of the runs of old newspapers that Nicholson Baker documents in "Double Fold"? Including a set of a major NY Newspaper that had been presented by the publisher.


I recently purchased a 3-volume set of the monumental 20-year-old Atlas of Canadian History produced by Univ of Toronto.

I was saddened to see that Vol 1 was a de-accessioned library copy from a high school in Canada. Wouldn't you think that the high school would want this on hand as a reference book. My brother-in-law (book lover and Ph.D. in history) was saddened to see that Vol 3 was a presentation copy to someone. Vol 2 although purchased used, appeared to be new-old-stock.

So now I have the 3-volume set at the new cost of the abridged one-volume version, or 1/3 the cost of a new set of the 3-volume set. But WHY are libraries dumping this stuff? With something of this nature, even if people don't look at it, I would think it would be their fond hope that someone would take the initiative to read it. Now if I can only get my kids to read it instead of watching animations on TV.

Cheers,

Richard

Richard L. Hess richard@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Aurora, Ontario, Canada http://www.richardhess.com/
Detailed contact information: http://www.richardhess.com/tape/contact.htm



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