Seymour Lubetzky

Seymour Lubetzky
Born Shmaryahu Lubetzky
(1898-04-28)April 28, 1898
Belarus
Died April 5, 2003(2003-04-05) (aged 104)
Los Angeles
Nationality American
Fields Library science
Institutions Library of Congress
Alma mater UCLA and UC Berkeley

Seymour Lubetzky (April 28, 1898 – April 5, 2003) was a major cataloging theorist and a prominent librarian.

Biography

Born in Belarus as Shmaryahu Lubetzky, he worked for years at the Library of Congress. He worked as a teacher before he immigrated to the United States in 1927. He earned his BA from UCLA in 1931, and his MA from UC Berkeley in 1932.[1] Lubetzky also taught at the UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, then the School of Library Service.[2] He was fluent in six languages,[3] a fact that made him valuable both as a cataloger and a speaker at library conferences.[2]

Influence on Cataloging

Lubetzky published three books that influenced the discipline of cataloging, and that are still influential in area of information technology. Librarianship in particular and information science in general had not been revolutionized as much since the likes of Antonio Panizzi, Charles Ammi Cutter or Paul Otlet. Cataloging Rules and Principles and Principles of Cataloging, as well as several periodical articles, solidified Lubetzky as one of the most significant influences in his field. He developed a rationalized approach to catalog code design, one that is even more relevant today as current cataloging principles are revisited and revised for a digital environment.

His unfinished book, Code of Cataloging Rules... unfinished draft (1960), was the basis for modern cataloging adopted by the first International Conference on Cataloging Principles (1961) held in Paris, France, called the "Paris Principles."[4] The code which eventually emerged from the conference became the basis for cataloging practice in the 20th century. In 1967 these concepts were encoded in the Anglo-American Cataloging Rules, which were used in US, Canadian and UK libraries.[5]

Lubetzky is credited with renewing an emphasis on the "work" in library catalogs. This had been a feature of book catalogs of the early 19th century, but was not carried through to the card catalog. Whereas Charles Ammi Cutter, a late 19th century influence on cataloging, had not distinguished between the idea of a "book" and the idea of the "work" in formulating his objectives, Lubetzky contrasts the two ideas, bringing back into play Anthony Panizzi’s original emphasis on the relationship between a title and all of the different editions of that title that might exist. Lubetzky’s idea was that relationships among all the editions and variations of a given work and the author of that work, in all variations of the author’s name, must be established and brought together so they can be found in one place.[6] All the works of a given author, in all their editions, should be linked together. As Lubetzky said at a 1977 Los Angeles conference, “The Catalog in the Age of Technological Change”:

“The catalogue has to tell you more than what you ask for…. The answer of a good catalogue is not to say yes or no, but … to tell [the user] that the library has [the item] in so many editions and translations, and you have your choice.”[7]

Legacy

Two books are dedicated to the work of Lubetzky, one entitled Seymour Lubetzky: Writings on the Classical Art of Cataloging and Future of Cataloging: The Lubetzky Symposium.

Just before his 104th birthday, the American Library Association awarded Lubetzky its highest honor, an honorary lifetime membership.[3]

Bibliography

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Seymour Lubetzky (2001), Seymour Lubetzky, Englewood, Colo: Libraries Unlimited, ISBN 1563089327
  2. 1 2 Seymour Lubetzky, 104, Librarian, Dies. http://www.nytimes.com/2003/04/13/us/seymour-lubetzky-104-librarian-dies.html
  3. Statement of International Cataloging Principles. 2009. http://www.ifla.org/files/assets/cataloguing/icp/icp_2009-en.pdf
  4. Chan, Lois Mai (2007), Cataloging and classification (Third ed.), The Scarecrow Press, Inc., p. 321, ISBN 978-0-8108-5944-9, 0810859440
  5. Richard P. Smiraglia (2001), The nature of "a work", Lanham, Md: Scarecrow Press, ISBN 0810840375
  6. From an audio clip posted by William Denton
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