Library Journal

Library Journal  
Abbreviated title (ISO) LJ
Discipline Professional library practice
Language English
Publication details
Publisher Media Source (USA)
Publication history 1876 - Present
Frequency 20 issues per year
Indexing
ISSN 0363-0277
Links

Library Journal is a trade publication for librarians. It was founded in 1876 by Melvil Dewey (familiar as the inventor of the Dewey decimal system). It reports news about the library world, emphasizing public libraries, and offers feature articles about aspects of professional practice. It also reviews library-related materials and equipment.

Its "Library Journal Book Review" does prepublication reviews of several hundred popular and academic books each month.

Library Journal has the highest circulation of any librarianship journal, according to Ulrich's — approximately 100,000.[1]

Library Journal's original publisher was Frederick Leypoldt, whose company became R. R. Bowker. Reed International (now Reed Business Information) purchased Bowker in 1985; they published Library Journal until 2010, when it was sold to Media Source, owner of the Junior Library Guild and The Horn Book Magazine.[2]

Contents

Early history

Founded in 1876 by Melvil Dewey, Library Journal originally declared itself to be the "official organ of the library associations of America and of the United Kingdom."[3] Its early issues focused on the growth and development of libraries, with feature articles by such prominent authors as Melvil Dewey and Charles Cutter focusing on cataloging, indexing, and lending schemes. In its early issues, Charles Cutter, creator of the Cutter Expansive Classification system, developed his ideas; R. R. Bowker discussed cataloging principles; and managing editor Melvil Dewey made recommendations for early library circulation systems. Initially, Library Journal did not review books unless they related to librarians' professional interests, but then, like now, the journal ran articles on collection development and ads from publishers recommending their forthcoming books for libraries to purchase.

Early issues of Library Journal were a forum for librarians throughout the U.S., Canada, and the United Kingdom to share news, discussions of their libraries' ideas and practices, and reports of professional activities such as meetings and conferences. In an 1878 prospectus, the journal stressed its importance by noting that small libraries, in particular, could gain the "costly experience and practical advice" of the largest libraries. Regular reading of Library Journal, the prospectus declared, would make "the librarian worth more to the library, and the library worth more to the people."[4] In the Notes and Queries section, librarians shared reports of how their library managed common problems, and they maintained a constant exchange of questions and answers about authorship and reader's advisory. Two prominent sections, the Bibliography (complied by Charles Cutter) and Pseudonyms and Anonyms (James L. Whitney), served as reference resources for librarians. The latter contained an ongoing list of titles of untitled works and real names of authors who were anonymous or used pseudonyms, with an index compiling all of them in the December issue.

Current features

The print edition of Library Journal contains the following sections:

Special editions

January:

February:

March:

June:

November:

Website

LibraryJournal.com, the website of Library Journal, provides full access to all print content, as well as recent archives, to both subscribers and non-subscribers. Visitors can sign up for email newsletters such as BookSmack, Library Hotline, LJ Academic Newswire, LJ Review Alert, and LJXpress. Web articles in the Libraries & Librarians category are listed by topic, with each topic assigned its own RSS feed so that users can receive articles relevant to their interests. Past and present reviews are archived and organized by type (book, magazine, video/DVD, gaming, etc.) and are also available in RSS feeds.

Library Journal also maintains an up-to-date list of library jobs in the website's JobZone.

See also

References

  1. ^ Library Journal, Ulrichsweb.com
  2. ^ "Media Source Acquires School Library Journal and Library Journal", Reed Business Information, 3/1/2010.
  3. ^ Library Journal 3.1 (1878): Title page.
  4. ^ Library Journal 3.2 (1878): 45.

External links