Subject: Libraries and the Cultural Record
The second of two important essays by Randy Silverman appears in the issue of Libraries and the Cultural Record that is now on its way to subscribers. The essay is: "Can't Judge a Book without Its Binding," Libraries and the Cultural Record, 42:3 (2007). The first sentence tells you why you need to read it: "The history of research libraries is, in one important regard, the history of institutions in conflict with themselves." Silverman's first offering in our pages--"Toward a National Disaster Response Protocol," Libraries and the Cultural Record, 41:4 (2006)--looked at the history of two institutional catastrophes and proposed creation of a National Disaster Center for Cultural Property "capable of implementing an effective response in situations where local resources and expertise are overwhelmed and cultural property is at risk." Libraries and the Cultural Record is a long-established journal of history with a mandate, recently broadened to serve those fields engaged in stewardship of the cultural record--conservation, preservation, archival enterprise, librarianship, museum administration, and information science. We solicit and publish articles and essays on the history of each of these fields of the information domain, and particularly seek submissions that explore relationships between and among them. To learn more about the journal and to subscribe, visit <URL:http://sentra.ischool.utexas.edu/~lcr/> To discuss your article or essay ideas for Libraries and the Cultural Record, write me. David B. Gracy II, Editor Editor, Libraries and the Cultural Record Governor Bill Daniel Professor in Archival Enterprise School of Information The University of Texas at Austin 1 University Station D7000 Austin, Texas 78712-0390 512-471-8291 Fax: 512-471-8285 *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:17 Distributed: Saturday, July 21, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-17-014 ***Received on Thursday, 12 July, 2007