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Leading
the Libraries
As
online scholarship flourishes, Yale's libraries remain at the heart
of the University's research enterprise. With new directors, both
Sterling and the Beinecke are bridging the book and the byte.
February
2002
by Bruce Fellman
Libraries
were once simple places: Books and journals came in, and, after
they were cataloged, books and journals went out. The library shelves
held collections of the world's wisdom, and in the hushed reading
rooms and research carrels, students and scholars pored over texts,
steadily increasing the planet's store of knowledge.
But while the fundamental concept hasn't really changed -- the library
still exists to house information and provide it to whatever public
it serves -- the institution itself has recently undergone a radical
transformation, both in the kinds of material it houses and in the
ways it makes its holdings available. Nowhere is this more true
than at the University, where the Yale library
system, the seventh largest in the world, is adapting to a host
of challenges brought about by changes in the nature of information.
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"We're
seeing the advent of the hybrid library, where laptops and
Internet access are as important as traditional materials."
-- Alice Prochaska
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These
changes are now being managed by new leadership. Last August, Alice
Prochaska, a historian with an extensive career in library administration
in England, became University Librarian. Earlier in the summer,
medievalist Barbara Shailor,
a dean and classics professor at Rutgers, returned to her native
New Haven to direct the Beinecke
Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Both women bring a wealth
of experience to a job that has become increasingly difficult to
define.
"Technology
is racing ahead so fast that we've arrived at a place where we no
longer know what the library of the future will look like," says
Prochaska, who comes to Yale after serving as director of special
collections at the British
Library, the national library of England. "But one thing is
certain: I don't see the demise of the book."
While partisans of paper and print will no doubt breathe a sigh
of relief, Prochaska, who is the second woman to hold the post of
University Librarian (Millicent Abell, who served from 1985 to 1994,
was the first), is no Luddite hoping to stem the digital tide. "We're
seeing the advent of the hybrid library, a place where laptops and
Internet access are as important as traditional materials," she
says. "This trend will continue, and it means that librarians have
a critically important role to play in ensuring that students and
scholars can make the best use of every kind of information resource
available, whatever form it takes."
Prochaska
oversees a bewildering array of material. The Yale library system
includes 22 separate libraries -- the Beinecke, science, medicine,
forestry, social science, and divinity, among them. Library users
have access to more than 10.5 million bound volumes and at least
63,000 journals, as well as, in the words of catalogers, 2.9 million
"units of audiovisual materials." The library system also houses
a number of collections, from manuscripts
and archives to human brains preserved in formaldehyde.
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The
new University Librarian is no stranger to the issues and
politics involved in the information revolution.
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Among
the highlights of the tenure of Prochaska's predecessor, Scott Bennett,
who retired after seven years as University Librarian, was the successful
completion of a massive renovation program, the creation of an off-site
shelving facility, the conversion of millions of records into a
new online catalog, and, during the past year, significant advances
in dealing with an ever-expanding number of digital documents (see
February 2001).
Within this information landscape, Prochaska is perhaps most at
home with the collections side of the Library. "I was trained as
an archivist; caches of archival material are what I best understand,"
she says.
Born and raised in Cambridge, England, Prochaska studied modern
British history at Oxford. There, she wrote her doctoral thesis
on the reform movement and the history of British radicalism in
the early 19th century, receiving her doctorate in 1975. She also
worked as a museum curator and in 1973 assembled a special exhibition
on London in the 1930s that captured media interest, and Prochaska
found herself on camera and in front of microphones. "I really enjoyed
radio and TV," she says. "It was terrific fun, much more than I
expected."
But it was the curatorial work that truly captured her attention.
"I found my metier," says Prochaska, adding that her career path
was not at all unusual. "Many archivists are also historians. Not
only are we involved in the care, preservation, and publicizing
of the records of organizations, but there's also a need to understand
how the organizations have worked over time."
After eight years at the Institute
of Historical Research in London University, Prochaska joined
the staff of the British
Library in 1992 as director of special collections. "Much of
the material at the British Library is similar to what we have at
Yale," she said, ticking off collections of manuscripts, music,
maps, and sound archives. "So I'm on familiar ground."
The new University Librarian is also no stranger to the issues and
politics involved in the information revolution.
Prochaska
chaired the British Library's Digitization Policy Group, and she
was responsible for moving the special collections into the Library's
controversial new building. "People have been carried away with
the digital revolution," she says. "We were asked, 'Why does the
Library need a new building when the book is obsolete?' One of our
great challenges is convincing everyone that there isn't likely
to be any diminishing of the amount of traditional material we need
to look after."
According to Prochaska, libraries, at least for the foreseeable
future, will be more than strings of ones and zeros that reside
in banks of information-dispensing computers. A watertight roof,
sturdy walls and windows, and a reliable climate-control system
will continue to be necessary. Digitization does, however, offer
an important advantage in these days of decreasing funds. "We now
have the opportunity to work closely with other kindred institutions
and share resources," she says.
Ironically, the easy and instant availability of digital copies
may make the real thing more, rather than less, important. "The
true scholar will always want to see the original," says Prochaska,
"and when that happens, our goal will be to provide the best possible
service."
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"This
is a laboratory for the humanities. We're trying to figure
out how to bring more undergraduates into the Beinecke." -- Barbara
Shailor
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The
mission is much the same across Wall Street at the Beinecke
Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Now 38 years old, this late-Modernist
jewel box holds one of the finest collections of "originals" on
campus -- and, without a doubt, in the world. Barbara Shailor, who
became the Beinecke's fourth full-time director last summer, was
already familiar with its contents. "This is where so many of Yale's
treasures are preserved," says Shailor, who succeeded Ralph Franklin,
the library's director for 18 years. "There are very few places
like the Beinecke."
The landmark building,
itself an icon of modern architecture, was designed by Gordon Bunshaft
and opened in 1963. Behind its striking translucent marble panels
is one of the few surviving Gutenberg Bibles, two double-elephant-folio
original editions of Audubon's Birds of America, and an illuminated
manuscript presented by Elihu Yale in 1714 to the Collegiate School,
which became Yale College. The Library, funded and endowed by the
Beinecke family, is Yale's principal repository for literary papers
and for early manuscripts and rare books in the fields of American,
British, and German literature, theology, Western American history,
modernism in art and literature, and the natural sciences.
During Ralph Franklin's tenure, the Beinecke's holdings, as well
as the infrastructure to support scholarship and education, grew
dramatically. The library now houses more than half a million volumes,
nearly 200,000 of which reside in a climate-controlled central tower,
and several million manuscripts. Its holdings range from ancient
papyrus rolls of Homer's Iliad to the avant-garde "metal
book" of F.T. Marinetti, and from the manuscripts of Cicero and
Juvenal to the papers of Ezra Pound and Langston Hughes.
Among the treasures is a group of rare, pre-1600 manuscripts that
the new director has studied extensively. "Originally, I thought
I'd be an archaeologist," says Shailor, who grew up in Hamden and
went to Wilson College in Chambersberg, Pennsylvania, from 1965
to 1969. There, she met Cora Lutz, an eminent medievalist who conducted
much of her work at the Beinecke and hired Shailor as a summer research
assistant. Shailor, a classics major, was intrigued with the history
of ancient Greece and had hoped to be walking through the lands
mentioned by Homer. But as she set about putting the Beinecke's
medieval manuscripts in order, "the experience literally changed
my perspective," she says.
Shailor was hooked. She enrolled at the University of Cincinnati,
earned a doctorate in classical philology (the study of the interplay
of language, literature, and culture) in 1975, and wrote her doctoral
thesis on the way knowledge in medieval Spain had been transmitted
through books. "I fell in love with the idea of the book -- of the
book as an artifact that represents the culture that produced it,"
says Shailor. "In essence, I was still doing archaeology."
After graduation, Shailor joined the classics faculty of Bucknell
University in 1975, teaching there for more than 20 years and serving
in a variety of administrative positions. In 1996, she left Bucknell
for Rutgers to become dean of its Douglass College, the largest
undergraduate women's college in the United States; she was also
professor of classics.
Through it all, Shailor made regular trips back to the Beinecke,
where she continued the work she'd begun in the 1960s with her first
mentor, research that culminated in the monumental three-volume
Catalogue
of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in the Beinecke Rare Book
and Manuscript Library, Yale University. Shailor's 1988
study, The
Medieval Book, also derived from her research at the Beinecke,
and has been reprinted several times, most recently last year, and
she has several other projects in the works. The proximity to some
of her primary source material will no doubt make her life as a
medievalist easier.
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The
Beinecke came about because of a realization in the 1950s
that a major research university needed a library devoted
to special collections.
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"The
kinds of materials we've collected -- books and manuscripts, along
with such things as photos and letters -- that's where research
in the humanities begins," says Shailor. "If you want to understand
a writer such as, say, Gertrude Stein, you can't just read her published
works. To put together the full picture, you have to look at photographs
and examine letters sent to her and letters she wrote. You can do
that here."
The Beinecke came about because of a realization in the 1950s that
"a major research university needed a library devoted to special
collections," Shailor continues. Major gifts from various members
of the Beinecke family provided funds for the structure and an endowment
for maintenance, staff, conservation, and the purchase of new material.
As such, the library is a financially independent organization.
Shailor reports both to the University Librarian and to the Corporation.
"We're distinct by historical mission and identity," she says. "But
there's a great and growing sense of synergy between the Beinecke
and the Yale library system."
There is also a sense that its collections could be used by more
people. "This is a laboratory for the humanities," says Shailor.
"We're trying to figure out how to bring more undergraduates into
the Beinecke, both by integrating our material into the curriculum
and making it easier to access."
The new director sees an important role for technology in solving
that problem. Increasing the number of entries of nontraditional
objects in the Beinecke's online catalog would, for example, enable
potential students to more easily determine whether something is
of scholarly interest. Conservation, of course, is an ongoing issue,
so digitizing delicate artifacts would allow them to be studied,
even "handled," electronically by a wider array of the public than
is now possible.
Shailor is also thinking beyond Yale, globally as well as locally.
"We want to use the fruits of our research in the humanities to
enrich the scholastic environment of New Haven-area students and
teachers," she says. "That's an opportunity -- and an obligation."
Between Shailor's own efforts and those of her colleague Alice Prochaska
at Sterling, Yale's libraries would seem to be giving new meaning
to the term "world class." 
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