College and Research Libraries


94 College & Research Libraries 

sum of its parts, and then some. 
Each date and its selected topic is fol-

lowed by a short essay. These vary in 
length and tone as they develop individ-
ual themes that crisscross the library's his-
tory, usually supported with a good lacing 
of facts and anecdote~. A high level of in-
terest is maintained through the copious 
use of illustrations, adding to the sense of 
destiny embodied in the era of Justin Win-
sor and the great period of collection 
building that followed. The collection at 
this point begins to dominate the scene 
and remains the focal point despite the in-
evitable need to be operationally and 
physically up-to-date . 

The range of the chronologically ar-
ranged topics places the Harvard library 
and its manifold collections in their many 
worlds. "A Harvard Library Book Helps 
Defeat the British" is an appropriate 
wording for 1775. "Harvard's Librarians 
Begin to Act Professionally'' signals an 
early awakening, certainly for 1827, 
among the librarians, although there is 
relatively little to be told about the great · 
mass of staff which made the library work 
day in and day out .. The inevitability of 
fund-raising for a private institution was 
noted in 1842 with ''Harvard First Suc-
cessfully Raises Funds to Fill Gaps in the 
Collections.'' Institutional inventiveness 
is heralded with ''The First American 
Card Catalog for Users is Proposed" in 
1860. The anniversary year of 1986 is 
marked by five essays, illustrated with a 
grim view of Harvard's storage library set 
forlornly in a wooded area. Throughout 
these engaging short pieces we are able to 
capture glimpses of Justin Winsor, Francis 
James Child, Charles W. Eliot, Archibald 
Cary Coolidge, William A. Jackson, Philip 
Hofer, Keyes Metcalf and others who con-
tributed mind and matter to the library's 
greatness. 

Beyond the events and individuals that 
have given Harvard its distinctive place, 
certain pervasive themes exist. Harvard, 
of course, has been preeminent in its at-
tempt to capture the word, now locked 
into a still-growing collection of 11.2 mil-
lion volumes. The need to give a whole-
ness to this vast number, especially within 
Ha_rvard's federated system of libraries, is 

January 1988 

a persistent motif. With books consciously 
placed everywhere on its campus and 
closely identified with their immediate au-
dience, control defers to coordination, 
and ultimately, to diversity. •character, 
sensibility, and an awareness of history 
become integrative forces rather than cur-
rent management theory. The Harvard li-
brary is justly proud of its ability to inno-
vate, another unmistakable theme as well 
as a trait which will continue to be called 
up. 

This volume has succeeded in making 
the history of one great library come alive. 
As an introduction it points the way to a 
fuller account that should come. The 
sources are there and the story a rich one. 
Until that time, this volume will serve the 
general reader, the historian of libraries 
and learning, and above all, perhaps, 
present and future librarians who, in turn, 
serve Harvard's great library.-Robert Ro-
senthal, The Joseph Regenstein Library, Uni-
versity of Chicago, Illinois. 

Internationalizing Library and Informa-
tion Science Education: A Handbook of 
Policies and Procedures in Administra-
tion and Curriculum. Ed. by John F. 
Harvey and Frances Laverne Carroll. 
Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 1987. 
402p. $49.95 (ISBN 0-313-23728-X). LC 
86-9946. 
The first words of the introduction to 

this collection of articles by some twenty-
eight authors assert that ''as far as librari-
anship is concerned, nationalism 'is dead 
and internationalism has replaced it." 
This thought, posited a decade ago by 
Maro Chauveinc in IFLA 's First Fifty Years, 
Achievement and Challenge in International 
Librarianship ( ed. by Will em R. H. Koops 
and Joachim Wieder. Munich: Verlag 
Dokumentation, 1977), is certainly argua-
ble today if one takes the United States as 
one's point of reference. Patel, Schick, 
and Harvey himself (coeditor) point out in 
their chapter titled ''An International Data 
and Information Collection and Research 
Program'' that the 1980s have seen a shift 
in cooperation and information exchange 
from developed to developing nations. It 

· is now the economically emerging areas 
that, perforce, have an international out-



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96 College & Research Libraries 

look, relying upon developments and re-
sources from other nations to help bring 
themselves forward. On the other hand, 
for developed countries, international co-
operation is less dependency based, being 
engaged in more rational and normative 
motivations. 

Certainly, this is true for the United 
States, and the editors' introductory as-
sertion that "we must keep abreast of 
change in . . . the international affairs of 
librarianship'' will be taken by many read-
ers as a value statement rather than an im-
perative; for, despite the stated intent to 
address also a non-North American, non-
English-speaking readership, the per-
spective of the individual chapters within 
this work is overwhelmingly American. 
All articles are in English and only a hand-
ful of contributors have been educated 
and/or have conducted their careers 
largely outside of the United States. 

This is not to say that the book's raison-
d' etre and its target audience may be over-
stated. However, as U.S.libraryliterature 
of recent years has produced only a few 
scattered journal articles on the topic of 
educating from an international perspec-
tive, this monograph may serve as a cata-
lyst in overcoming the prevailing paro-
chialism. Half of the contributions are 
concerned with internationalizing library 
and information science courses. The 
working definition of internationalization 
is ''the process by which a nationalistic li-
brary school topic, an entire curriculum, 
or an entire school is changed into one 
with a significant and varied international 
thrust, the process of which it is perme-
ated with international policies, view-
points, ideas, and facts.'' Course outlines, 
to varying extents, show how interna-
tional topics may be integrated into such 
areas of study as collection development 
(Richard Krzys), academic librarianship 
(Fritz Veit), public librarianship (Larry N. 
Osborne), government publications (Tze-
chung Li), and information science 
(Harold Borko and Eileen Goldstein). 

In some of the chapters, the internation-
alization focus is subsumed by the au-
thor's rationale for the entire course struc-
ture, such that the suggested international 
instruction seems superimposed rather 

January 1988 

than integrated. By and large, however, 
the contributions present both rationale 
and strategy for expanding course content 
beyond national borders. 

The same can be said for the other half of 
the anthology, which deals with the con-
text of internationalization and adminis-
trative services. Articles in the former sec-
tion make a case for internationalization 
(Frances Laverne Carroll), present a his-
tory of library school activities in this area 
(Donald G. Davis, Jr.), set international-
ism within the broader context of higher 
education (Martha Boaz), and suggest a 
program for raising interest in internation-
alization Gohn F. Harvey). The section on 
administrative services is concerned with 
such topics as student recruitment (Peter 
Havard-Williams), advisement and place-
ment (Kieth C. Wright), faculty support 
(Edwin S. Gleaves), and continuing edu-
cation (Robert Berk). 

Most chapters adhere to the accepted 
scholarly format of introduction; presen-
tation of ideas and/or data, with appropri-
ate references to the literature; conclu-
sion, with suggestions for continuing 
research; notes; and bibliography. 

Curiously few contributors toU<;:hed 
upon questions of multilinguistic compe-
tency of educators and students. Unstated 
assumptions, especially from an Ameri-
can perspective, may be that all significant 
contributions to the field are reported in 
English and/ or that neither teachers nor 
students have the linguistic ability to deal 
with non-English literature or non-
English-speaking colleagues. There are no 
normative statements on this subject, no 
calls for requiring foreign-language train-
ing for admission to library school, nor for 
incorporating foreign-language readings 
in course syllabi. 

It remains to be seen how influential this 
book may be in increasing instruction with 
an international perspective, thereby ex-
posing students to a world larger than the 
one in which they are being trained. 
American librarians who, contrary to the 
opening statement, have perceived a re-
turn to nationalism since the 1960s, may 
be encouraged to view this work as a man-
ifestation of a reemerging international fo-
cus and vision for the future of the 



profession.-Linda E. Williamson, Univer-
sity Library, University of Illinois at Chicago. 

Richardson, John V ., Government Informa-
tion: Education and Research, 1928-1986. 
Bibliographies and Indexes in Library 
and Information Science, no. 2. New 
York: Greenwood, 1987. 186p. $35 
(ISBN 0-313-25605-5). LC 86-27086. 
The generalized title of this work is per-

haps a bit misleading, since it is in fact a 
book containing the results of two dis-
tinctly different research efforts. Al-
though both portions of this volume deal 
with graduate-level research pertaining to 
government publications, the two parts 
vary greatly in terms of utility and proba-
ble audience. The major portion of the 
book is a thorough, comprehensive anno-
tated bibliography that should have broad 
appeal for both those in library schools 
and working librarians. The rest of the 
work is a quantitative and sociological 
analysis of graduate work in government 
publications that will seem somewhat eso-
teric to all but a miniscule few. 

The valuable part of this book is the bib-
liography, which contains 317 entries and 
is a complete list of master's theses (or 
specialization papers) and doctoral disser-
tations written on any aspect of govern-
ment information at library schools in the 
United States and Canada from 1928 
through 1986. Each entry, in addition to 
bibliographic information and the name of 
the individual's faculty adviser, contains 
an abstract of one or more paragraphs. 
Regular readers of Government Publication 
Review's ''Theses and Dissertations in 
Documents" column will find the format 
familiar; Richardson is the editor of that 
column, and this bibliography represents 
a cumulation of lists already published by 
him and a retrospective search of the pro-
fessional literature. The entries are 
grouped into six broad divisions: local 
government studies, state government 
studies, federal government studies, for-
eign government studies, United Nations 
government studies, and comparative 
government studies. 

As Bernard Fry says in his introduction 
to the work, this meticulously compiled 
120-page list of theses and dissertations is 

Recent Publications 97 

''the first comprehensive bibliography of 
graduate research in the field.'' It will be 
of obvious use to master's and doctoral 
students who are interested in govern-
ment publications as an area of potential 
research; this bibliography can serve as a 
starting point by identifying unexplored 
areas as well as useful models and meth-
odological approaches. It also should 
prove helpful to a great many practitio-
ners in libraries, since many of the entries 
are thorough bibliographies that could 
easily be adapted for in-library use. Docu-
ments librarians needing research litera-
ture to help them make a decision in areas 
-such as collection arrangement and biblio-
graphic control procedures will find some 
useful items here to supplement a search 
of the periodical literature. 

The first one-third of the book examines 
what Richardson terms ''The Sociology of 
Research in Government Information.'' 
Based on the 317 authors whose works he 
has compiled, the author produces a sta-
tistical portrait of those doing graduate 
work in the field. Some of the variables he 
looks at are the number of pages in the 
thesis or dissertation, quantitative orien-
tation of the work, gender of the student, 
gender of the faculty adviser, scholarly 
eminence of the institution, subsequent 
publications of the student, and citations 
in Social Science Citation Index. These 
and several other inputs were assigned 
quantitative values and analyzed using 
the Statistical Package for the Social Sci-
ences (SPSS). A variety of tables present 
the accumulated data, and Richardson 
discusses the results as they pertain to 
several hypotheses with which he began 
the project. Most of the results are not es-
pecially surprising: most would have ex-
pected dissertations to be longer and more 
quantitative than theses, doctoral stu-
dents subsequently to publish more than 
terminal master's students, and the few li-
brary schools that emphasize the study of 
government publications (such as North 
Carolina and UCLA) to account for a very 
high percentage of the total work cur-
rently being produced. The only mildly in-
teresting finding is that at the master's 
level (but not as the doctoral level) those 
with a faculty adviser of the opposite sex