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Library of Congress Acquires Spider-Man?s ?Birth Certificate? - 30-04-2008
Comic Book Guy of “The Simpsons” has been known to have a cardiac episode or two. But an acquisition the Library of Congress just made might give his heart its “worst episode ever.” (Apologies for borrowing the pun from that particular “episode.”)
“Spider-senses” all around the Library were set tingling when we learned that the Library had just acquired 24 pages of original 1962 drawings from “Amazing Fantasy #15,” which marked the first time the world’s most famous web-slinger, Spider-Man, would appear in print anywhere. The Spider-Man origin story in “Amazing Fantasy” was created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko; the pages are Ditko originals, complete with pencil erasures and white-out opaquing fluid.
The acquisition came to the Library within the past few weeks, thanks to an anonymous donor. (News had already begun leaking out — where else — in the blogosphere.)
A couple of colleagues and I got the opportunity yesterday afternoon the see the pages in person. (Don’t worry, we made sure to keep our drool far away from the art.) They do indeed appear to be in very good condition, especially considering their age. The Library’s Prints and Photographs Division (P&P) provided me with a scan of one of the pages and a detail section, which you’ll see here at right. (They are, in actuality, even a bit less yellow than the scans appear.)
I also snapped a few pictures as Helena Zinkham, acting chief of P&P, carefully splayed some of them out for us on a table. In one of the shots of the very first page, you get a clear sense of some of the areas where white-out was applied. The “SPIDER-MAN” title balloon in the banner is literally stuck onto the page.
People who are more familiar with Amazing Fantasy #15 than I are probably not surprised by this fact, but I got a good chuckle from the disclaimer that appeared at the top of the first page (pictured at left). It almost seems to be begging skeptical readers to give Spider-Man a chance, completely unaware of the phenomenon that was about to be unleashed on the world.
The excessively exclamatory paragraph reads: “Like costume heroes? Confidentially, we in the comic mag business refer to them as ‘long underwear characters’! And, as you know, they’re a dime a dozen! But, we think you may find our SPIDERMAN just a bit … different!”
Most sentient beings are already aware that Marvel’s Spider-Man is one of the most popular superheroes ever, spawning several comic-book series, graphic novels, television series, video games, toys, a blockbuster movie franchise, and adding phrases to our popular lexicon such as “true believers” and “your friendly neighborhood (fill-in-the-blank).”
The pages will be digitized within the next few weeks, although access to the images will likely be restricted to on-site use at the Library (copyright restrictions and such). The pages themselves are available to researchers with a valid reader-identification card by appointment only.
Our full news release can be found here.
I never try to guess where an editor will place a story, but I hear a rumor that J. Jonah Jameson will be giving this front-page treatment.
Tags: spider-man, spiderman, comics, comic books, superheroes, marvel, marvel comics, marvel entertainment, marvel enterprises, stan lee, steve ditko
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My First ?Bloggiversary? - 24-04-2008
If I weren’t back on Atkins, I might be tempted to track down a cupcake and a birthday candle, because today is the first anniversary of this blog. (It is also, not coincidentally, the 208th birthday of the Library of Congress, a milestone this blog itself will not reach until the year 2215, long after the entire Internet has been downloaded onto nanobots and injected into our bloodstreams. Assuming, of course, that our new nanobot overlords still indeed call it the “Internet.”)
I don’t really have anything particularly profound to say about it, but when has that ever stopped a blogger?
Here is a short list of observations, lessons learned, and potential new directions:
1 ) The past year has been an incredibly fun voyage. I have treasured the interaction, the ability to communicate in ways that more traditional mechanisms don’t really permit, telling a few interesting stories you might not otherwise read about, and the thought that I have been able even in a small measure to stoke people’s interest in the Library of Congress.
2 ) You comment-spammers are persistent!
3 ) When we launched, there were fewer than 10 federal blogs, and we were — as far as I know — the first truly institution-wide blog among federal agencies. As of today, that list has more than tripled to at least 31. Even if it all ends tomorrow, it’s a distinction of which I’ll always be proud.
I’m also humbled that we have been able to provide many of our sister agencies (at least a dozen, I’m sure, but I’ve lost count) with guidance and advice as they wade into their own blogospheric waters. (Michelle Springer in our OSI Web Services Division deserves much of the credit here.) If being among the first has helped others to follow, I think that in itself is a pretty nice legacy to have.
4 ) I danced a little happy dance when we cracked the Technorati Top 10,000. We have basically a single post to thank for that. We were wallowing well into the 40,000s before that.
5 ) I have a meeting scheduled tomorrow with some folks internally to help plot a course for future improvements. Maybe I’ll bring low-carb cheesecake.
First and foremost will involve upgrading to the latest version of WordPress, but we want to look beyond the merely technical. (And yes, I’d like to fix a lot of those glitchy punctuation issues that seem to pop up on old posts. I’m told it’s a javascript something-or-other, but I don’t know what coffee has to do with anything.)
6 ) It’s taken longer than expected, but I still anticipate that this blog will leave “pilot” status and achieve formal recognition. This is probably more federalese than you’re interested in, but getting a policy in place also holds the door open to additional blogs sprouting up around the Library. Some of my colleagues are coming to me with great ideas, and I have to confess that I can’t wait to become an avid reader of other Library blogs. Frankly, my own writing bores me to tears — but thanks for sticking with me anyway.
7 ) Every day that I do not have time to post, I am wracked with horrible guilt. My various other duties come first, duties which are very much not in pilot status, but I know that regularity and compelling content build readership and a sense of community. I am very interested in building on what we started a year ago. Perhaps it’s time to make another run at wheedling some of my colleagues into co-author status. (I have to admit to being a wee bit jealous of other federal blogs with multiple contributors, although I am fortunate to have wonderful ideas and draft language that are often sent to me by colleagues.)
8 ) And finally, if the nanobots are reading this, I hope that they keep this blog — or whatever its successor ends up being — up and running. Access to knowledge is at the core of our mission, something I am confident will remain true long after I and everyone I work with today are long gone.
Meanwhile, we continue to take additional steps into Web 2.0. I anticipate that you’ll soon start to see a lot more video content from the Library in a lot more places, and much better stuff than my own interim slap-dash efforts. (What’s the deal with my “Brary of Ongress” avatar?!)
We’re talking about expanding on social-networking in meaningful ways. For instance, we’d really like to find a way to allow people to share their myLOC collections beyond just the typical “send a postcard” links, which are admittedly a little last century. Also, I’ve been dabbling in Twitter a bit in my spare time. I’m still intimidated by the thought of having “another beast to feed,” but I have to admit that I do like the concept.
We have a lot of whip-smart people around here with a lot of ambitious ideas. Resources and time permitting, I hope to help them realize as many of those goals as we can.
What do you think would improve this blog? Where would you like to see the Library go next in Web 2.0?
(Image of very old computer from the PPOC.)
Tags: blogs, bloggers, web 2.0, web2.0, library of congress, libraryofcongress, bloggiversary, bloggiversaries
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Can a Building Get Fan Mail? - 23-04-2008
I appreciate all of the email feedback I get, both the positive and, yes, even the
negativeconstructive criticism.I got an email yesterday, however, that was too good not to share it in its entirety, with the author’s permission. And I swear we didn’t pay him to write this:
I just visited the Library of Congress for the first time yesterday [April 21]. It was pouring rain, and I went in through the Madison building to get my Researcher card and came to the Jefferson building through the tunnel. I took care of my business at the Folklife Center, then wandered around to the front from the rear corridors, so I wasn’t ready for the full impact of the front part of the building.
I have traveled a bit - not as much as I’d like, but a bit - and I’ve seen some beautiful things. I’ve never been stunned by the sheer beauty of a place like that in my life. Aside from my son being born and my wife on our wedding day, I have never been moved like that by sheer, stunning beauty.
If it’s possible to fall in love with a building, I may have.
I can’t imagine what it would be like to actually work there. Could a person spend day after day surrounded by so much grace and beauty and not be changed in some subtle, fundamental way? Would it make you more awake to the beauty around you or would it raise your expectations so much that everything would start to feel washed out and empty?
The exhibitions were startlingly well done, too, by the way. I was struck by how sensitively they’d been put together. The Constitution exhibit didn’t shy away from how some people had been failed by our Constitution. (I loved the Native American woman in the AV display describing her contempt for it.) I love that to get to the 16th Century maps, you walked through a really well put together exhibit of Mezoamerican culture. (I particularly liked the description of the extent of the Inca Empire). I loved the touchscreen technology on the monitors scattered around throughout the public area of the building.
The one impression that stays with me is that of the staircase leading up from the tunnel. You come out of a very functional, utilitarian tunnel into a staircase that is very 1920s/30s and as you walk up the marble steps, you feel just the slightest bit off-balance because each step has been worn down by a century or so of people walking on them. There is a feeling of continuity in that which really inspires me.
As I proof-read this letter, I am astonished by the number of times I’ve used the word “love”. I’m a grumpy, curmudgeonly person by nature. I don’t throw the word “love” around casually. Obviously the Library has touched me in some important way.
Thank you.
John Fladd
New Boston, NH
www.almostgruntled.comTags: thomas jefferson building, library of congress, libraryofcongress, architecture, history, dc, washingtondc, washington dc, tourism, travel
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Images of ?Hitler?s Private Gallery? Now Online - 18-04-2008
There are probably few people about whom more words have been written than Adolf Hitler. But today the Library of Congress has helped add to the visual dimension surrounding one of the most reviled figures in history.You might have seen news a couple of weeks ago about a painting in Britain’s National Gallery. The Gallery announced that the 1525 painting “Cupid Complaining to Venus,” by Lucas Cranach the Elder, was once part of Hitler?s private collection. And the Library provided the proof.
The Library’s Prints and Photographs Division (P&P) supplied the National Gallery with a copy of a photo of the Cranach oil-on-wood painting contained in an album called “The Private Gallery of Adolf Hitler.” The photos in the album depict 74 paintings and two tapestries in Hitler?s private art collection.
The album is one of nearly 2,000 items included in the Library?s Third Reich Collection, which is housed in both the Prints and Photographs and the Rare Books and Special Collections divisions. The total number of photo albums in the collection is 548.
Today P&P posted online images from the entire album, known by its German title “Katalog der Privat-Gallerie Adolf Hitlers,” here. (Go to page 58 to see the Cranach image in question, which is also reproduced at right.)
The National Gallery knew the photo of the painting existed, thanks to researcher Dr. Birgit Schwartz, who had been studying Hitler’s art collecting and spotted the painting’s photo at the Library. After getting the tip from Schwartz, the National Gallery approached the Library.
Archivist Alan Crookham corresponded via e-mail with P&P reference assistant Kristi Finefield. She tracked down the album, found the photo and confirmed with Crookham that the images matched. Finefield then photographed the photo and sent it off to the National Gallery.
Thanks to the excellent reference service from the Library, not to mention the value of visual collections, the National Gallery was able to announce the fascinating history of its painting. And now the entire album is online for the world to see.
For more information on the Third Reich Collection, visit this link.
(Thanks to Donna Urschel for help writing this post)
Tags: hitler, adolf hitler, germany, nazis, world war ii, wwii, third reich, art, paintings
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David McCullough?s Must-See Experience - 18-04-2008
If you traveled to Washington, D.C., and had time to see just one attraction, what would it be? The Capitol? The White House? Maybe the National Mall?
On Saturday, noted historian David McCullough, who was inducted as a “Living Legend,” said that our new exhibition “Creating the United States” — part of the new Library of Congress Experience — was tops on his list. The exact quote:
“I saw yesterday an exhibition which every American ought to see: ‘Creating the U.S.’ If visitors to this, our capital city, whether they’re from our own country or from abroad, were to see only one exhibition, one building, one place during their visit, seeing ‘Creating the U.S.’ would be the one to see.”
I shot some admittedly amateurish video at our April 12 grand opening festivities for the Experience, and I thought McCullough’s speech was what I just had to share first. (Sorry for the silhouette effect, though.) Hopefully, time permitting, more will follow.
UPDATE: A transcript of his full remarks follows the jump.
Remarks of David McCullough
Library of Congress Living Legends Ceremony
April 12, 2008Thank You. Mr. Billington, thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, I write history. You see here a line-up of people who have made history. And in that sense especially I feel honored to be included.
We are here on Capitol Hill, which is our American acropolis, and it’s all together appropriate, fitting, in the right spirit that our Capitol is side-by-side with our greatest library.
You go to Philadelphia to Carpenter?s Hall where the first Continental Congress met; upstairs is the first library, a very small building that every American ought to see.
I saw yesterday an exhibition which every American ought to see, “Creating the U.S.” If visitors to this, our capital city, whether they’re from our own country or from abroad, were to see only one exhibition, one building, one place during their visit, seeing “Creating the U.S.” would be the one to see.
And I want to emphasize as strongly as I can that the power of this great institution isn’t just in its collections, isn’t just in its accessibility, it’s in the staff. The very able, knowledgeable, dedicated staff.
[Applause]
And I just want to single out one person from that staff, because in this particular weekend he deserves to be recognized: Gerry Gawalt, right up there, who created the “Creating the U.S.” exhibition.
[Applause]
One of the innumerable lessons of history is there’s no such thing as a self-made man or woman. Never happened. We’re all the results of people who have helped us, who’ve guided, who’ve inspired us. We are all in many ways in their debt for all of our lives, to our parents to teachers to so many people.
I am infinitely indebted for my way of life to this institution. It was here in this building, in one of the collections in the 1960s, that I, a former English major, then working for the U.S. Information Agency, discovered the thrill, the pull of history quite by chance. And it changed my life, and I knew as soon as I got involved with the work that that’s what I wanted to do for the rest of my life. So to be honored in this way here on this day on these steps in this part of our acropolis for me is as high a moment in my life as I can imagine.
But there’s one more great influence that I want to tell you about because it’s the most important of all, and that’s my editor-in-chief, my wife Rosalee. Would you stand up for me?
[Applause]
We have five children, 18 grandchildren. She’s mission control.
I try to write for the ear as well as the eye, because most of the writers from other days that I’ve enjoyed and admired the most, particularly the poets, all do that. And she has read everything that I’ve ever written aloud to me, and I read aloud to her, and she gives me most of the big words that I use.
[Laughter]
Thank you, Dr. Billington. Thank you, fellow Living Legends. Thank you, U.S. of A.
# # #
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To Thomas: Happy Birthday. From: Your Library. - 11-04-2008
Tomorrow we’re having a party. Maybe you’ve heard.
The Library of Congress is throwing open its bronze doors to the public for the first time since 1990 to celebrate the new Library of Congress Experience, a project for which I have run out of superlatives, so I will leave the descriptions to sources of less bias. (Those doors, entering directly into the spectacular Great Hall, will now be the main entrance to the Thomas Jefferson Building from the outside.)
We are celebrating Congress’s Library?everything that Congress has done to sustain this institution for 208 years, including not just financial support, but also the decision by the Congress to make the Library of Congress the nation’s copyright repository.
But there was also a singular act of Congress dating back nearly 200 years, a matter of some controversy at the time, that would forever change the course of the Library of Congress and our collecting philosophy. That is to say, after the British used the contents of the original Library to burn the Capitol in 1814, Congress the following year purchased the 6,487-volume personal library of Thomas Jefferson, which “recommenced” the Library and helped establish the “universal” nature of our collections.
This Sunday is Jefferson’s 265th birthday, but tomorrow his original Library goes back on display in stunning fashion in the building that bears his name, one important aspect of an Experience our visitors will never forget.
The Washington Post today ran a great story (front page!) about Thomas Jefferson’s library, and our own staff newsletter, The Library of Congress Gazette, examined the story behind Thomas Jefferson’s library in even greater detail, which I have reproduced in full after the jump, led by our crackerjack editor, Gail Fineberg.
One aspect of the story I’d like to underscore because of the viral nature of the Web: The Library, in a project funded by Jerry and Gene Jones, has spent several years reconstructing Jefferson’s library, roughly two-thirds of which perished in 1851 in yet another fire. We need to replace only about 300 of the 6,487 original titles, so insofar as this can be considered a plea to the rare-book blogosphere, well, that’s on the table.
Library Reconstructs, Displays Thomas Jefferson?s Library
by Gail FinebergScholarly detectives, after 10 years of quiet sleuthing deep in the Library?s stacks and the international rare-book market, have matched more than 4,000 volumes that were missing from Thomas Jefferson?s library after a U.S. Capitol fire destroyed nearly two-thirds of his books 157 years ago.
Of the original 6,487 volumes that Jefferson had sold to Congress in 1815, only about 2,000 remained following the fire that started from a faulty chimney flue on a frigid Christmas Eve morning, at 7:30 a.m., Dec. 24, 1851, and spread through the congressional library housed in the Capitol.
These original 2,000 books, plus the replacement copies, now constitute a permanent Southwest Gallery display of ?Thomas Jefferson?s Library,? adjacent to the new exhibition ?Creating the United States.? These and several other special exhibitions open with the new Library of Congress Experience at noon, Saturday, April 12, in the Thomas Jefferson Building.
During the past 10 years, Mark Dimunation, chief of the Library?s Rare Book and Special Collections Division, and his staff have assembled all but about 300 titles that were in Jefferson?s original library.
Describing the historical significance of Jefferson?s complete collection, which he has come to know intimately during his immersion in the reconstruction project, Dimunation said in a recent speech:
?This was the collection that had nursed the Declaration of Independence, that had guided early American diplomacy, that had fueled innovations in American technology, and that assisted a Virginia planter. And now [with Congress?s purchase of Jefferson?s books in 1815] this collection, built around Jefferson?s notion of universal knowledge, was to serve as the source of inspiration and ideas for the new republic.?
Collection Forged by Fire
?The nucleus of the Library of Congress was forged in fire,? Dimunation said in his retelling of the Jefferson library story, a story that begins with a 1770 fire that burned Jefferson?s family home in Shadwell, Va., and consumed most of his first library consisting of some 200 volumes, including his law books and 40 books he had inherited from his father.
Jefferson?s appetite for books grew well beyond replacement of his loss. Buying from booksellers in Philadelphia, Annapolis, Williamsburg and abroad, he had acquired 1,250 titles by 1773. ?When he departed the following year for Europe, he looked forward to greatly expanding his library, and, whenever he was not carrying out his duties as the American minister to France, he haunted the Parisian bookstalls and placed frequent orders with dealers in London and Europe,? Dimunation said.
By the time he returned to America in 1789, Jefferson had more than doubled the size of his library, and he had ?considerable debt to prove it,? Dimunation said. By 1815, his collection had grown to 6,487 volumes.
While Jefferson took great pride in the extent of his library, he was most pleased that his selections reflected care and erudition,? Dimunation said. ?His love of books and bibliography, his travels and his worldly learnedness, and his ample (though sometimes shaky) means provided him the unique opportunity to build a private library that was truly unrivaled in America.?
Jefferson was not interested in a bibliophilic collection. ?He was not buying first editions, the best editions, or the best copies,? Dimunation said. ?He wanted working texts, ordinary books for the 18th century. He was not building a gentleman?s library for show. He was building a scholar?s library to meet his needs as a philosopher, statesman, diplomat, scientist, planter, architect, musician and scholar.?
He read and collected, in their original languages, Greek and Latin classics, books of contemporary 18th-century European philosophers and thinkers who influenced his thoughts on the rights of man, books on politics, law and history, books on art, architecture and music, books and pamphlets on all branches of science.
?He truly is the American enlightenment,? Dimunation said. ?He embodied the philosophy of the entire 18th century. He believed concerted rational thought focused on a problem would produce a reasonable solution. He studied the classics in order to construct his understanding of democracy and the republic in very much the same way he would approach a problem with his crops or a scientific question.?
Although he was physically far removed from 18th-century Europe, Jefferson was connected by his library to the revolutionary new ideas that were brewing abroad. ?One reason he built an enormous library was his need to feel at the center of the conversation, even though he was remote from it,? Dimunation said.
Books fed not only his theoretical, intellectual life but also served his daily needs for information?how to brew beer, how to mill lumber, how to keep accounts, bee-keeping, planting experiments, discussions of the soil,? Dimunation said.
As much as he treasured his personal library, Jefferson offered it to Congress on Sept. 21,1814, to ?recommence? the Library of Congress, which had burned one month earlier in the U.S. Capitol that the British had torched on Aug. 24, 1814. In retirement in Monticello, he wrote the Library Committee of Congress a letter in which he described the history of his collection:
?I have been fifty years making it, and have spared no pains, opportunity or expenses, to make it what it is.? Commending the breadth and depth of his library, particularly in the sciences, and its usefulness to Congress, he argued: ??. there is, in fact, no subject to which a member may not have occasion to refer.?
By a vote of 71 to 61 on Jan. 16, 1815, the House of Representatives voted to approve the purchase of Jefferson?s library for $23,950 (the amount proposed by a Georgetown bookseller to the Joint Library Committee), but not without debate.
The Annals of Congress (28:1105-06) reported that ?those who opposed the bill did so on account of the scarcity of money and the necessity of appropriating it to purposes more indispensable than the purchase of a library; the probable insecurity of such a library placed here: the high price to be given for this collection; its miscellaneous and almost exclusively literary (instead of legal and historical) character, etc. ?
?To those arguments, enforced with zeal and vehemence, the friends of the bill replied with fact, wit, and argument, to show that the purchase, to be made on terms of long credit, could not affect the present resources of the United States; that the price was moderate, the library more valuable from the scarcity of many of its books, and altogether a most admirable substratum for a National Library.?
President James Madison, to whom Jefferson had shipped crates of books from Europe, approved the purchase on Jan. 30, 1815.The following May, horse-drawn wagons following two alternate routes from Monticello to Washington transported the books. Each was wrapped in paper and reshelved in order in Jefferson?s old pine bookcases that were nailed shut for the journey.
With its new foundation, the Library of Congress resided in Capitol space until the disastrous 1851 Christmas Eve fire destroyed 55,000 volumes, including two-thirds of Jefferson?s library.
Bicentennial Revives Library
In preparation for the Library?s bicentennial celebration in 2000, Librarian of Congress James H. Billington promoted the idea of reconstructing and displaying Jefferson?s library. Dimunation and his staff sifted through various Library collections and assembled some 3,000 volumes that matched descriptions of Jefferson?s books contained in an annotated five-volume bibliography of Jefferson? original library, which E. Millicent Sowerby compiled over eight years of research and the Library published in 1952.
On display throughout the bicentennial year, 2000-01, Jefferson?s reconstructed library included these books, plus missing volumes acquired as gifts over the years and several hundred items purchased with a generous gift bestowed on the Library for the reconstruction project by James Madison Council members Jerry and Gene Jones.
Since then, we have made good progress,? Dimunation said. ?From the original desiderata of 1,012 items, the list has been reduced to fewer than 300 items outstanding. The remaining titles are sought out on the antiquarian market.
?This is a complicated and ambitious project, one that is subject to the whims of the antiquarian book market and to the parameters of Jefferson?s universal approach to collecting,? Dimunation said. ?We are seeking the scarce as well as the common, the arcane as well as the mundane, and in nine different languages from three centuries published in all corners of Europe and the New Republic.?
To keep suppliers from bidding up prices of books desired by the Library, Dimunation ordered Americana replacement copies largely through a single rare-book dealer.
Dan De Simone, curator of the Lessing J. Rosenwald Collection at the Library, visited booksellers in three different countries in 2006 and purchased 130 items. These titles range from a folio of John Blair?s ?The Chronology and History of the World, from the Creation to the Year of Christ? (London, 1754) to Edmond Hoyle?s short treatises on the games of whist, quadrille, piquet and bac-gammon (London, 1745-46) and an eight-volume treatise ?concerning the manner of fallowing of ground, raising of grass seeds & training of lint & hemp for the increase & improvement of the linen manufacturers of Edinburgh.?
Throughout the project, Dimunation and De Simone relied on Sowerby?s painstaking scholarship and detective work, which Dimunation describes as ?the greatest bibliography of the 20th century.? She used a ?much worked over holograph draft? based on Jefferson?s holograph catalog of his collection, which had disappeared in the 19th century, and a catalog that was printed for Congress after the volumes arrived in Washington in 1815. Sowerby consulted Jefferson?s manuscript writings and correspondence to annotate her work.
Memory, Reason and Imagination
In arranging Jefferson?s library for display in tall wood-and-glass cases that encircle pavilion visitors, Dimunation has preserved Jefferson?s original library-organization scheme, which Jefferson described as ?sometimes analytical, sometimes chronological, and sometimes a combination of both.?
Following a modified version of Francis Bacon?s organization of knowledge, Jefferson grouped his books into three main categories??History? (Memory), ?Philosophy? (Reason) and ?Fine Arts? (Imagination). He further subdivided these categories into 44 ?chapters.? For example, the broad category of History contains Ancient History and American History, as well as History?Natural, which includes Agriculture, Surgery and Mineralogy.
The Library of Congress has classified and organized its entire collection?now grown to more than 138 million items on 650 miles of bookshelves? according to Jefferson?s plan.
The Rare Book and Special Collections Division, which has preserved Jefferson?s own books sitting neatly on iron shelves in a cool, dry, dim environment, became a staging area this month for assembling the permanent display. Like a choir director blending voices, Dimunation has been loading the original books onto carts and wheeling them from the stacks into the reading room. From other carts he added in the new acquisitions, the matching copies found in other Library collections, and book boxes indicating missing volumes?all according to Jefferson?s master organization plan.
Then the carts were wheeled in order through the neighboring Hispanic and European reading rooms to the Southwest Pavilion, where Dimunation, De Simone and other staff placed the volumes in order in display cases that will conserve them in cool, dry conditions.
Viewers can spot Jefferson?s original books by the green ribbons inserted in the books. Gold ribbons signify new purchases and no ribbons indicate volumes from the Library?s collections. Book boxes printed with the author?s names and titles indicate missing volumes.
Thomas Jefferson?s Library will remain a working collection. Researchers wanting to use it may order books that will be retrieved from the display and served in the Rare Book and Special Collections Division Reading Room. ?The Jefferson collection is the fourth most widely used collection in our division,? Dimunation said.
Surrounded by Jefferson?s old books and aided by new technologies, 21st-century viewers can immerse themselves in Thomas Jefferson?s mind and his 18th-century world that produced a new experiment in self-governance, an experiment he understood could succeed only if enlightenment prevailed over ignorance.
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Students, Media Get Look at Library of Congress Experience - 09-04-2008
We held a media event today to show off the new Library of Congress Experience (opening April 12!), and we were fortunate to be joined by teacher Amy Trenkle, who spoke about the power of the Library’s educational materials, and many of her students from Stuart-Hobson Middle School here in DC (thanks, Amy!), along with several students from Herndon (Va.) Middle School.
Photographer John Harrington sent me a couple of images with captions, which I thought I would share here. (The files linked from the thumbnails are about 500kb and 800kb, respectively.)
Caption: Librarian of Congress Dr. James Billington announces the opening of the new Library of Congress Experience exhibits during a press conference Wednesday, April 9, 2008 at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. The Library’s new immersive Experience opens Saturday, April 12, 2008 to the general public, offering visitors unique historical and cultural treasures brought to life through cutting-edge interactive technology and a companion website, myLOC.gov.
Caption: During a preview of the new Library of Congress Experience, (left to right) Jasjeet Singh, Thomas Huang, Ariana Lauer, and Emily Beacham, from Herndon Middle School in Herndon, Va., look on as Librarian of Congress Dr. James Billington and Cynthia Wayne of the Library;s Interpretive Programs Office demonstrate the Library’s new interactive exhibits, Wednesday, April 9, 2008 at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. The Library’s new immersive Experience opens Saturday, April 12, 2008 to the general public, offering visitors unique historical and cultural treasures brought to life through cutting-edge interactive technology and a companion website, myLOC.gov.
Tags: education, students, learning, knowledge, computers, technology, exhibits, library of congress, history, museums
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A Little Refreshing at the Library - 08-04-2008
As part of our new Library of Congress Experience, the Library has been updating a lot of our materials and signage around our Capitol Hill complex. If our renovation in 1997 was a facelift for the Thomas Jefferson Building, then maybe we’ll call this a touch of Botox.
Some of the most noticeable changes include tall, beautiful exhibition banners in front and around the Thomas Jefferson Building.
There are also about a dozen wayfinding “pylons” scattered around our property, which have also been updated from a basic blue-and-white look to incorporate some gorgeous imagery from the Library, our new logo (yes, we have a new logo!), and some information about the new Experience. Pylons around the Thomas Jefferson Building are being updated first, with the Madison and Adams buildings to follow.
I included a single photo here, but if you want to see more, I put up a full slideshow on Flickr, here.
In one of the shots, you’ll notice a pair of what appears to be tourists or convention-goers (they had matching nylon bags with a big logo on the side) inspecting a pylon. It was kind of fascinating: They were walking around the pylon in circles, bending down, moving up closer to look at details.
I knew they were attractive signs, but I had no idea they would stop pedestrians in their tracks!
Tags: library of congress, dc, washington dc, library of congress experience, exhibits, tourism, travel
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Time To Celebrate! - 08-04-2008
If you haven’t seen, we have just released details of our April 12 public festivities launching the wonderful, new Library of Congress Experience.
You can read all about it here and, as always, keep up to date on all aspects of the Experience here.
Tags: library of congress, thomas jefferson, thomas jefferson building, exhibits, artifacts, museums, travel, tourism, art, architecture
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?Ad?ded Value for the Library - 07-04-2008
In the PR biz, there is what is known as “earned” media — the kind where you work the phones and email in order to interest a reporter into covering your story. And then there is paid media, which, of course, are generally in the form of advertisements. Every once in a while, however, the two collide, in which the ads themselves become newsworthy, a combination that is the Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup of marketing.Such was the felicitous case yesterday for the Library of Congress on the front page of the Metro section of The Washington Post.
In support of our new Library of Congress Experience, opening April 12, we purchased a number of ads (all with private funds), with a heavy emphasis on the Metro system. We know that once people are in DC and they learn about what we’re all about, they are much more prone to visit.
The Post did a larger story about Metro’s new, “less staid” advertising approaches, giving our paid campaign a tremendous “earned” boost in the process. The story is here, and the print version featured not one, not two, but three gorgeous photos of Library ads.
The campaign concept is fairly simple: We use images of four historical figures (Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, Jackie Robinson and Marilyn Monroe), except that the images are composed entirely from fingerprints. The ad copy talks about how those individuals and many more across history and culture are represented in our collections — in the case of the more modern-day celebrities, perhaps in ways people weren’t aware of.
And then to emphasize the new interactive way in which our collections and exhibitions are being brought to life, we use the phrase “At Your Fingertips,” preceded by a word linked to each person: “Imagination” for Jefferson, “Integrity” for Lincoln,” “Courage” for Robinson and “Fame” for Monroe. The ad copy ends with the tagline: “Explore. Discover. Be inspired.”
On a related matter, the sneak preview video that I posted late on Friday is now almost laughably dated. I shot it a week ago today, and I was just in the Jefferson Building this morning. The progress even in the last seven days is dazzling. If I didn’t have “real” work to do, I’d probably go over and spend a few captivating hours of my day.
Hopefully all of the Library fans out there will consider doing just that, on or after April 12.
Tags: ads, library of congress, libraries, advertisements, advertising, thomas jefferson, abraham lincoln, jackie robinson, marilyn monroe
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