从图书馆工作到图书馆学:1920-1960年加拿大图书馆事业的形成

Lorne D. Bruce
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摘要

本文探讨了论述提出了一个独特的章节在加拿大图书馆当它出现作为一个现代职业生涯在1920年和1960年之间。在第一次世界大战之后的四十年里,图书馆员试图在不同的客户和印刷世界之间发挥中介作用。与此同时,图书馆学发展成为一门以大学为基础的学科,以收集、组织和管理公共消费的印刷记录的知识和技术为基础。研究了三个突出的问题:可接受的图书馆教育和培训问题,服务伦理的首要地位,以及在第一波女权主义时期围绕该职业的女性强度的问题。在20世纪60年代之前,获得两学期的图书馆学学士学位是进入这一行业的标准要求。图书馆为市政当局、大学和学院、学校、企业和政府的不同客户提供公共精神服务和面向印刷的管理服务,这是一种明显的混合。此外,图书馆工作是一个女性密集的职业,努力获得更好的公众认可。虽然影响图书馆事业发展的因素有很多,但地域因素、英法文化差异和美国先例都是非常重要的。1960年以后,图书馆员的核心知识开始向图书馆情报学过渡,价值观的转变,印刷资源的重要性降低,第二波女权主义的兴起,这些相互联系的因素都发生了变化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
From Library Work to Library Science: Forming Canadian Librarianship, 1920-1960
This paper explores the discourse presented about a distinctive chapter in Canadian librarianship when it emerged as a modern professional career between 1920 and 1960. During the four decades following the World War I (WWI), librarians sought to develop an intermediary role between different clienteles and the world of print. At the same time, library science evolved as a university-based discipline grounded in the knowledge and techniques of collecting, organizing, and managing printed records for public consumption. Three prominent issues are examined: the question of acceptable library education and training, the primacy of a service ethic, and issues surrounding the profession’s female-intensity during first-wave feminism. Before the 1960s, a two-term bachelor’s degree in library science was the standard requirement to gain entry into the profession. There was an identifiable blend of public-spirited service and print oriented stewardship to librarianship serving diverse clienteles in municipalities, universities and colleges, schools, businesses, and governments. As well, librarianship was a female-intensive career that strove to attain better public recognition. While there were many influences on the development of librarianship, the regional considerations, the everpresent English-French cultural divide, and the American precedents were very important. All these interconnected elements changed after 1960 as the core knowledge of librarians began to transition to library and information science, as they adopted new values, as the importance of print resources lessened, and as second-wave feminism came into being.
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