Subject: MLA statement on significance of original materials
Thanks to Alice Schreyer for distributing this to us. I hope it has also gone to the appropriate preservation DistLists. This is an important statement by an important scholarly group and I believe needs to be responded to by the research library community. I am discussing it here on this list before sending comments to the Committee Chair, as requested, so that I can benefit from others' comments (and, quite possibly, corrections). The Statement's clear emphasis on the importance of artifactual evidence is valuable and needs to be more broadly understood within the library community, which admittedly occasionally conflates "information" with "text" and insufficiently recognizes the physical context. The Statement is also valuable in that it engages a major scholarly association with a major library issue, bringing issues of importance to both communities and beginning a necessary and desirable dialogue. However I do not believe the Statement is as helpful to the scholarly community as it wishes to be or thinks it is, and it is certainly not entirely helpful to the library community which is trying to do what it can to preserve scholarly materials in the face of widespread administrative indifference and lack of serious funding. The committee is chaired by Tom Tanselle and I think reflects many of his views, which are well known and well articulated: all print objects must be saved, the preservation copy (whether film or digitized) cannot be as useful as the original, and costs are simply not part of the equation. I have very great respect for Tanselle, and have been glad that he has been representing this view (e.g. in his Malkin lecture a few years ago, but certainly elsewhere); without it (and him) too facile assumptions might too often be made. However I think it is incorrect and unfortunate for his no-concession view to be taken as policy by a major scholarly organization. I would much rather his views were to be noted and validated, but within a context that recognizes that in this area, as in every other scholarly area, compromises must be made. There are a number of faulty assumptions and even incorrect statements in the present draft. I hope the preservation community (and the research library community, using their preservation people) will also respond to them. Let me mention a couple and then note the Statement's most important lack: 1. The statement takes no account of the difference between the hand-press and the machine-press period. One can theoretically agree that "every copy is a potential source for new physical evidence," but in practice it is easy to see that very little is to be gained from multiple copies of an Avon (or even a Tauchnitz) paperback when compared with an Elizabethan quarto. This has consequences for what we in libraries should do. 2. The statement conflates several ideas of "original" in confusing ways. In recommendation 1b, the means for retaining originals of two kinds are noted: first, those that have been filmed or digitized (the statement apparently infers destructive modes, which are not always the case), and second, "printed reference books that have been replaced by electronic revisions." The latter case is typically dealt with by present collection policies and I suspect is not a problem--BIP or ChemAbstracts will be kept by libraries, as will STC after the ESTC project is completed. In any case it is quite a different problem from that of preservation techniques, and is not clearly described. 3. Recommendation 2c calls for both page-image and text transcription of electronic texts. Even leaving aside issues of cost (see below) the statement does not mention any of the markup languages for transcribed texts, such as the Text Encoding Initiative, which have been maturing for several years and are supported by a broad base of textual scholars in the humanities. Such scholars view with dismay the attempts to provide texts in unmarked, unre-useable forms (e.g. Project Gutenberg). The absence of comment on markup in the Statement damages its credibility and its sense of realism. 4. That the "democracy of access to texts on paper will not soon (if ever) be equaled by the availability of electronic texts" is I think arguable even from what we know today. I have no disagreement with the care taken by special collections repositories to insure that First Folios are not handled daily by undergraduates, but neither do I make any claim for democracy of access, except perhaps among the larger freemasonry of qualified scholars. However (as the Statement helpfully notes) a digitized Folio could be easily available to millions even today. The paragraph on this topic is marked by cant where instead a more careful discussion of a very complex set of issues is warranted. For example, the paragraph seems to say that the reading experience in libraries is under threat and "may disappear with the decentralization of electronic access to texts." Without noting that new forms of reading experience are now bound to occur (cf. among many others Richard A. Lanham, *The Electronic Word*), the Statement seems to advocate a very static conception of the history of reading that it elsewhere promotes as important. 5. The generalized statement that reproductions are inferior to originals does not take into account the growing number of occasions where the digitized (and network-accessible) version of texts is superior to what can be seen by the naked eye (e.g. Dead Sea Scrolls, Peirce manuscripts and Edison papers; I believe there are print cases as well). _Cost_ (the most important issue of all those I note): the Statement nowhere addresses the cost, whether financial or social, of what it recommends. It would be unreasonable to ask such a statement to be specific in dollar terms. What it should do is recognize that libraries and other scholarly agencies, including the MLA and its members in their home institutions, are underfunded in every respect that matters to scholarship, and that choices have to be made every day. We cannot do all that we desire. Perhaps the most important cost that the Statement should address is opportunity cost. If libraries (the only preservation agencies presently at work on this issue) are to do what the Statement recommends, where are the funds to come from or, alternatively, what should the libraries _not_ do in order to fund what the Statement recommends? I can understand the committee taking the broad view that funding of libraries is not their problem. I think it would be an incorrect approach.* *(Libraries try to be partners in scholarship with the scholars represented by this committee, and by and large go out of their way to find the right services to provide. In fact at research institutions the libraries that are most successful have made alliances with faculty to assure that they are moving in the right direction and to get help in gaining funding from the administration. On such campuses (i.e. where the libraries are most successful) the scholars are often most successful as well, because of the quality of the library.) Libraries have been more seriously underfunded every year for the past decade or so. In spite of that, they (we) have been undertaking significant preservation programs to retrieve some portion of the decaying materials we hold. The Commission on Preservation and Access has been helpful in gaining federal funding. NEH has been helpful. The fact remains that with current funding only a small portion of the acid-paper-period books will be preserved using available and foreseeable techniques. The blunt fact is: for every book we spend more money on to preserve, the fewer other books we will preserve. This fact needs to be stared in the face at the same time that the fact is noted that every artifact is important. Given that we can't do it all, _what_is_more_important_? I hope the Committee addresses this problem in its revised version so that it can give even more helpful advice to those who are trying to preserve their scholarship. Peter Graham Rutgers University Libraries 169 College Ave., New Brunswick, NJ 08903 908-445-5908; Fax: 908-445-5888 *** Conservation DistList Instance 8:34 Distributed: Monday, November 7, 1994 Message Id: cdl-8-34-006 ***Received on Monday, 7 November, 1994