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El. knyga: Inside Major East Asian Library Collections in North America, Volume 1

(Wayne State University, USA), (Clark County Public Library, USA), (University of Tsukuba, Japan)
  • Formatas: 352 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Oct-2022
  • Leidėjas: Emerald Publishing Limited
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781802622355
  • Formatas: 352 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Oct-2022
  • Leidėjas: Emerald Publishing Limited
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781802622355

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As a branch of International and Area Studies Librarianship (IASL), East Asian Librarianship has become increasingly important in an age of globalization as scholars engage in interdisciplinary research and study. Volume 1 of Inside Major East Asian Library Collections in North America presents an extensive collection of interviews that give key insights into Japanese and Korean librarianship.



East Asian Studies librarianship requires a variety of technical skills, combining deep subject background with knowledge of library processes/workflows, an awareness of research trends, and digital developments in their respective fields. Professionalism, tradition, standards, respected bodies of knowledge and individual practicing professionals personality traits are closely examined over both volumes.



Inside Major East Asian Library Collections in North America promotes shared understanding of librarians work and contribution to society and will enable further collaborations and new services, utilizing the unique and distributed nature of their expertise.

Recenzijos

This compendium of interviews with East Asian librarians in the U.S. and Canada affords the reader insight on multiple levels into the careers of individual librarians and the commonalities and distinctive aspects of individual East Asian collections, particularly rare items. A valuable introduction to the world of East Asian librarianship, the book provides a variety of perspectives on daily work, career paths, administration, problems facing the field, and fulfillment found in the work. Collectively, the essays are an affirmation of the importance of printed collections and a ringing endorsement of East Asian librarianship. -- Gail King (Retired Asian Librarian, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University) Someday, when we all realize how special librarians are, we shall find that this book offers a most intimate insight into their lives. With a consistent set of questions, a comparative perspective emerges from this direct methodologya new dimension to library studies that allow real librarians to speak for themselves. -- Prof. Lian-Hee Wee (Department of English Language and Literature, Hong Kong Baptist University) I am very glad to hear of the publication of this new book introducing some of the major East Asian library collections and their curators. I am sure it will be read with interest not only by professionals in the field but also by anyone concerned with recent developments in area studies. -- Charles Aylmer (Head of Chinese Department, Cambridge University Library) Inside the Worlds Major East Asian Library Collections in North America is a highly informative and much anticipated account of many of the world-renowned Asian book and manuscript collections connecting East and West. Celebrated and supported by their academic institutions locally, the libraries discussed in this comprehensive volume are often unparalleled behemoths of knowledge holding published and archival resources that are at times completely unique and yet accessible regionally, nationally, and internationally. In our globally connected 21st century, these exceptional libraries collect the literary genius and recorded histories of the past and allow present and future scholars to study some of the rarest primary sources to advance our field of study in the decades and centuries to come. -- Dr. Florian Knothe (Director of the University Museum and Art Gallery, University of Hong Kong) Inside the Worlds Major East Asian Library Collections in North America is an important new title to collections experts of Asian materials. At a time when the world is facing tragedies of anti-Asian racism, it is critical to continue to collect and preserve Asian collections for scholars and students for teaching, research, and learning to continue sustaining awareness and understanding of Asian cultures and histories. The editors of this volume have insight and experience in balancing the languages and areas of academic libraries of North America, focusing not only on CJK, but important ethnic collections from the Okinawan to Cantonese collections. It is an outstanding contribution to the field and serves as a key reference tool for librarians, researchers, and cultural administrators. -- Allan Cho (Community Engagement Librarian, Program Services, Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, University of British Columbia) A profoundly interesting and useful volume of 42 interviews with librarians administering East Asian collections in North America. It is an excellent read for those interested in developing an international library collection, as well as students and researchers in East Asian Studies. Contributors discuss how they entered this branch of librarianship, developed their collections, and share their practices. As a developer and instructor of the course ILS 450: Global Perspectives in Librarianship, this is a perfect model embracing trends in international collections, a specialization path in Library Science, and research on how international collections are developed. Overall, it is a well-articulated compendium of interviews that are addictive and hard to stop reading. -- Dr. Tamara E. Blesh (Adjunct Instructor III, University of Maine at Augusta) The interview-based approach to writing about librarianship is a fascinating choice by editors of this volume. Through conversations with over 40 leading experts in the field,Inside East Asian Collections in North America not only charts the history and landscape of the most important East Asian library collections, but it also brings quiet librarianship to life by offering rare insights into the work-related joys, anxieties, and strategic thinking of these key professionals. Their success stories are just as diverse as their backgrounds and career paths. Highly recommended for anyone interested in East Asian studies or area studies librarianship. -- Dr Shenxiao Tong (East Asian Studies Librarian, Edinburgh University Library) The library is an important hub for the exchange of human knowledge and an important organizational form for the exchange of different cultures. For a long time, libraries in North America have collected a lot of valuable literature resources from Asia, especially East Asia and Southeast Asia. These resources have become important in promoting inheritance and mutual learning of Eastern and Western civilizations. Professional librarians who contribute to the collection and service of these resources are the civilized messengers and guardians of this culture. The unique achievements of this book reveal their efforts and ideals for us. It is not only worthy of learning and reference by professionals, but it also enables our wider audience to realize the sublimity of this profession. -- Professor Qingshan Zhou (Department of Information Management, Peking University) The book, being a collection of interviews with North American East Asian librarians, is extremely informative for professional librarians, oral historians, and enthusiasts for literature and libraries. Furthermore, it is inspiring for East Asian Librarians, and it could enrich their work in terms of building collections and library management. It provides a useful comparison between East Asian collections/libraries in North Americaits quite an accomplishment for the editors. -- Katarķna Ferianķkovį (Librarian, Library of Far Eastern Studies, Faculty of Arts, Charles University) Ultimately, the success of any library depends on its ability to connect with its users through its resources. This publication is a very unique overview of some of the major East Asian Library Collections found across North America. The librarians reflections included here not only highlight the commitment they have to protecting information that is culturally and historically significant, but they also explore their professional obligation and determination to provide users with academic sources that reflect a truly global community. The items housed in these great libraries are no longer curiosities; they are acclaimed and relevant academic resources that do much more than simply supplement university collections. Now, at last, an extensive publication has been produced to showcase the great variety of libraries, librarians, and institutions aiming to empower students to find resources that will enable them to produce academic works of cultural significance and scholarship. -- Andrew J. Stark (Associate Dean and Head of Libraries and Information Services, The Southport School, Queensland, Australia) This book offers a lively, original, and very instructive introduction to the wealth and diversity of East Asian collections in North America, the largest outside Asia. Focusing on librarians perspectives, it underlines the challenges of East Asian librarianship in the context of an ever more globalized and technological world where flexibility, creativity, and cooperation are at the heart of knowledge collecting, sharing, and mediating. As a librarian, I welcome the editors approach, which brings to light the passionate efforts of a profession often left in the shadows. These librarians contribute to the essential tasks of advancing knowledge and, even more crucial in these challenging times, helping bridge the gap between cultures. Not only will this book be of special interest for librarians, academics and students in East Asian studies, but it will also prove to be an informative reading for anyone interested in the evolution of area studies librarianship. -- Soline Suchet-Lau (Deputy Head of Collection Development Department; Asia Team Leader; Subject Librarian, Taiwan and Chinese Pre-modern Collections, BULAC: University Library for Languages and Civilisations (Paris)) Patrick Lo, Hermina Anghelescu, and Bradley Allard introduce the major East Asian and Southeast Asian collection libraries in North America and their librarians to us through a series of interviews they have conducted. This is a grand tour of librarianship and the wealth of knowledge that is well preserved and developed in these major libraries. -- Prof. Tai-Lok Lui (Chair Professor of Hong Kong Studies; Director, Academy of Hong Kong Studies; Director, Centre for Greater China Studies, The Education University of Hong Kong) With all of the tensions worldwide, it is important to resolve misunderstandings and build trust. This exploration of East Asian collections in North America, as described by different East Asian Studies librarians, is a doorway to the culture of East Asia. -- Kazuyuki Sunaga (Professor of Library and Information Science, Kokugakuin University in Tokyo, Japan) Through this volume, Patrick Lo and his co-authors bring to light what is known by some, but unknown by many: that libraries in North America hold some of the worlds greatest collections of East Asian materials. Across Canada and the United States, the range and depth of these collections is brought to light in this fascinating exploration of these major collections. In addition to these explorations, the editors include introductions to the librarians and curators who build and maintain these collections, as well as the scholars who utilize them to serve the growing global interest in East Asian studies. -- Peter E. Sidorko (Senior Consultant and Former University Librarian (2011-2021), The University of Hong Kong) Librarians are the bridge between readers and books. East Asian librarians are the bridge between Eastern culture and Western culture. This book is the bridge between the outside world and the East Asian library. It brings to light the characteristics and management of East Asian library collections from the perspective of the librarians, making the East Asian Library a place with warmth and vitality. Through the introduction of this book, the general public can learn that there are so many distinctive East Asian libraries in the United States and Canada. -- Prof. Chao-Chen Chen (Chair Professor of Center for General Education and University Librarian of Chung Yuan Christian University) For so many of us, libraries are a place of sanctuarya space for contemplation, learning, and inspiration. Inside the Worlds Major East Asian Library Collections in North America takes us behind the scenes of world-leading East Asian libraries and offers an intriguing and detailed insight into the working practices of librarians, as well as the challenges and frustrations they face in managing collections both large and small. This two-volume set not only provides a lens through which to understand librarianship today; it also identifies new trends in the field and possibilities for the future. In sum, an inspirational and thought-provoking read. -- Amelia Allsop (Research Manager at the Hong Kong Heritage Project, and Co-founder at History Ink) The book Inside the Worlds Major East Asian Collections in North America adopts interviews as a unique approach to capture the vigorous development of East Asian librarianship and East Asian collections in the past thirty-plus years. It paints a colorful picture of librarians in this field. They come from different cultural and academic backgroundsmany entered the field as their second-career choice, but all have devoted their passion, energies, and various professional training to librarianship. They have experienced the dramatic changes in the field and have grown and contributed so much. They are one of the main reasons that we see the flourishing condition of East Asian libraries and collections in North America today. -- Luo Zhou (Librarian for Chinese studies, International & Area Studies Department, Duke University Libraries) These stories provide a vivid portrait of individual librarians and highlight the multi-cultural community of East Asian librarians. [ ...] The two-volume set lifts the curtain on East Asian libraries and invites readers to come behind the scenes by highlighting the works and stories of their librarians. Alongside discussing the trends and challenges of East Asian librarianship, interviews delve into the leadership and management of academic libraries, and the myriad of positions held by East Asian librarians. The interviewees include librarians from academic universities and art museums, providing readers with a panoramic view of their work. -- Cecilia Zhang, University of Kansas, Journal of East Asian Libraries (Book Review)

Foreword; Ellen Hammond

Foreword; Loretta E. Kim

Foreword; Matthias Kaun

Volume I: Japan and Korean Studies

East Asian Librarianship and Library Collections in North America:
Introduction

Chapter
1. Kuniko Yamada McVey, Librarian for the Japanese Collection,
Harvard-Yenching Library, Harvard University

Chapter
2. Reiko Yoshimura, Head Librarian Freer Gallery of Arts and Arthur
M. Sackler Gallery Library, National Museum of Asian Art, Smithsonian
Libraries and Archives

Chapter
3. Dr. Kristina Troost, Head, East Asian Collection, Duke
University(retired)

Chapter
4. Dr. Daniel McKee, Japanese Bibliographer, Cornell University
Library

Chapter
5. Yunah Sung, Korean Studies Librarian & Project Manager, Asia
Library, University of Michigan

Chapter
6. Hyo Jin Moon, Subject Specialist for Japanese Studies and Korean
Studies, University of California San Diego

Chapter
7. Dr. Ann Marie L. Davis, Associate Professor, Japanese Studies
Librarian, The Ohio State University Libraries

Chapter
8. Dr. Steve Witt, Subject Specialist Librarian for Global Studies
and Japanese Studies and Head of the International & Area Studies Library,
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Chapter
9. Adam Lisbon, Japanese & Korean Studies Librarian, University of
Colorado Boulder

Chapter
10. Dr. Rebecca Corbett, Japanese Studies Librarian, University of
Southern California

Chapter
11. Joy Kim, Curator, Korean Heritage Library, University of Southern
California

Chapter
12. Ellie Kim, Korea Studies Librarian, University of Hawaii at Mnoa
Library

Chapter
13. Tokiko Bazzell, Japan Studies Librarian, University of Hawaii at
Mnoa

Chapter
14. Kana Jenkins, Curator, Gordon W. Prange Collection, East Asian
Studies Librarian, University of Maryland

Chapter
15. Sharon Domier, East Asian Studies Librarian, University of
Massachusetts Amherst

Chapter
16. Dr. Beth Sara Katzoff, East Asian Studies Librarian, New York
University

Chapter
17. Hana Kim, Director, Cheng Yu Tung East Asian Library, University
of Toronto

Chapter
18. Shirin Eshghi, Head, Asian Library, University of British
Columbia

Chapter
19. Katherine Kalsbeek, Head, Rare Books & Special Collections;
Saeyong Kim, Korean Studies Librarian; Tomoko Kitayama, Japanese Studies
Librarian; Jing Liu, Chinese Studies Librarian; Sarbjit Randhawa, South Asian
and Himalayan Studies Librarian, Asian Library, University of British
Columbia

Chapter
20. David Sulz, Public Services Librarian (includes East Asian
Studies)

Chapter
21. Dr. Max Dionisio, Acting Department Head, Library and Archives
and the Bishop White Committee Library of East Asia, Royal Ontario Museum

Chapter
22. Cordes Tarantino, Assistant Librarian, C. Laan Chun Library,
Asian Art Museum of San Francisco

Chapter
23. Dr. Hermina G.B. Anghelescu and Alice Yuet Ling Law, East Asian
Librarianship and Library Collections in the United States and Canada: A
Selective Bibliography, 2000-2020

East Asian Librarianship and Library Collections in North America: Conclusion
Patrick Lo is currently serving as the Director of Liberal and Martial Arts Practice Association. From 2012-2018, he served as Associate Professor at the Faculty of Library, Information & Media Science, the University of Tsukuba, Japan.



Hermina G.B. Anghelescu is a Professor in the School of Information Sciences, Wayne State University, Detroit, U.S.A. She is the author of numerous research studies and a member of the editorial board of several periodical publications.



Bradley Allard is currently a Reference and Outreach Librarian at the Clark County Public Library in Winchester, Kentucky, U.S.A. and a freelance editor.