<div dir="ltr"><div class="gmail_default"><font face="georgia, serif" style="font-size:small">Ted Gemberling: "</font><font face="georgia, serif" color="#000000">One point I made awhile back: can we expect this problem to diminish over time? There are no more pre-1801 books being published. If we concentrate on upgrading good records to DCMB(x), could we gradually get to where we can just ignore non-DCRM(x) records?"</font></div><div class="gmail_default"><font face="georgia, serif" color="#000000"><br></font></div><div class="gmail_default"><font face="georgia, serif" color="#000000">This is true, but then there's the 19th century, which requires equal attention to detail and becomes ever more sneaky as its years go on (well into the 20th century, in fact). If you take handset type apart you can't put it together again <i>exactly</i> the same way, which is a boon to rare book catalogers on the lookout for hidden editions: pre-1820 books (roughly speaking) don't cover their tracks all that well. Once plates get into the act, not only can changes be made that are not evident at that level of variant spacing in every line, you can be fooled into thinking that a manifestation is different when it fact it's mostly all same. I discovered at Dartmouth that there are about eight basic setttings of Burns's works, once you're into Plateland, that proliferate in every direction at all levels of the market, as seen the long wall of Burns in our stacks (where I also learned to date publishers' cloth).</font></div><div class="gmail_default"><font face="georgia, serif" color="#000000"><br></font></div><div class="gmail_default"><font face="georgia, serif" color="#000000">But yes, the principle holds true: what we're trying to do is archaeological, and a cumulative process of noticing things and marking where they are and where they came from. This has always been a minority enterprise, but then again, research institutions are minority enterprises as well in their own way, and equally under siege.</font></div><div class="gmail_extra"><br clear="all"><div><div class="gmail_signature"><font face="'courier new', monospace">RICHARD NOBLE :: RARE MATERIALS CATALOGUER :: JOHN HAY LIBRARY</font><div><font face="'courier new', monospace">BROWN UNIVERSITY :: PROVIDENCE, R.I. 02912 :: 401-863-1187</font></div><div><span style="font-family:'courier new',monospace"><</span><a href="mailto:RICHARD_NOBLE@BROWN.EDU" style="font-family:'courier new',monospace" target="_blank">Richard_Noble@Br</a><span style="font-family:'courier new',monospace"><a href="http://own.edu" target="_blank">own.edu</a></span><span style="font-family:'courier new',monospace">></span></div></div></div>
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