Book Read Free

You Could Look It Up: The Reference Shelf From Ancient Babylon to Wikipedia

Page 48

by Jack Lynch


  5. See Osselton, “Murray and His European Counterparts,” p. 68.

  6. Trench, On Some Deficiencies, p. 9.

  7. Philological Society, Proposal, p. 4.

  8. Murray, Caught in the Web of Words, pp. 11, 32.

  9. See Osselton, “Murray and His European Counterparts,” p. 73.

  10. Trench, On Some Deficiencies, p. 29.

  11. Trench, On Some Deficiencies, p. 31.

  12. Osselton, “Murray and His European Counterparts,” p. 74.

  CHAPTER 18½: OVERLONG AND OVERDUE

  1. Dickens, David Copperfield, p. 169.

  2. Blount, Glossographia, sig. A3r.

  3. Rees, Cyclopædia, 1:vii.

  4. Coughlan, “Dictionary Reaches Final Definition.”

  5. Lough, “Encyclopédie,” p. 3.

  6. Watts, “Encyclopédie Méthodique,” p. 350.

  7. Murray, Caught in the Web of Words, pp. 142–43.

  8. Headrick, When Information Came of Age, p. 155.

  9. Osselton, “Murray and His European Counterparts,” pp. 61–62.

  10. The annual reports from 1991 to 2010 appear at http://oi.uchicago.edu/research/projects/cad/.

  CHAPTER 19: AN ALMS-BASKET OF WORDS

  1. See Shea, Phone Book.

  2. Katz, Cuneiform to Computer, p. 55.

  3. Dodd, Beauties, 1:vi, 23.

  4. Boswell, Life, 3:197.

  5. Cochrane, “Most Famous Book of Its Kind,” p. 9.

  6. Bartlett, Collection, p. i.

  7. Katz, Cuneiform to Computer, p. 79.

  8. “Bartlett’s Updated,” from Gleick’s blog, Bits in the Ether, http://www.around.com/bartletts.html.

  9. Bunge, “Alms-Basket,” p. 24.

  10. Hayman, “E. Cobham Brewer,” pp. ix–xi.

  11. Brewer, Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, 1st ed., p. v.

  12. Brewer, Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, 1st ed., p. v.

  13. Hayman, “E. Cobham Brewer,” p. x.

  14. Brewer, Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, 1st ed., p. vii.

  CHAPTER 19½: READING THE DICTIONARY

  1. Day, Market Driven Organization, chapter 6 (no page).

  2. Collins, Are You a Geek? p. 93.

  3. Eliot, Middlemarch, p. 52.

  4. Disraeli, “Imprisonment of the Learned,” in Curiosities, 1:56.

  5. Quoted in Franklin, Prison Writing, p. 153.

  6. Hill, ed., Johnsonian Miscellanies, 2:352.

  7. Orr, Life and Letters, 1:75.

  8. Folsom, Walt Whitman’s Native Representations, p. 15.

  9. Ferlinghetti and Peters, Literary San Francisco, p. 116.

  10. Borges, Seven Nights, p. 109.

  11. Stavans, Dictionary Days, p. 31.

  12. Clark, Huxleys, p. 227.

  13. Tedlow, Andy Grove, p. 295; Lesinski, Bill Gates, p. 9.

  14. Anderson, Wikipedia, p. 15.

  15. Kogan, Great EB, pp. 297?98.

  16. Jacobs, Know It All, p. 5.

  17. Jacobs, Know It All, p. 120.

  18. Jacobs, Know It All, p. 9.

  19. Shea, Reading the OED, pp. ix–x.

  CHAPTER 20: MODERN MATERIA MEDICA

  1. Gray and Carter, Anatomy, p. vii.

  2. Richardson, Making, p. 14.

  3. Richardson, Making, p. 144.

  4. Richardson, Making, p. 6.

  5. Richardson, Making, p. 166.

  6. Gray and Carter, Anatomy, p. 675.

  7. Richardson, Making, p. 168.

  8. See Richardson, Making, pp. 197–99.

  9. “Student’s Library,” p. 349.

  10. Hacking, “Lost in the Forest.”

  11. Cartwright, Diseases, p. 332.

  12. Hacking, “Lost in the Forest.”

  13. Davis, “Encyclopedia of Insanity,” p. 64.

  14. Carey, “Revising Book on Disorders.”

  15. Roan, “Revising the Book on Mental Illness.”

  16. DSM, p. 39.

  17. Davis, “Encyclopedia of Insanity,” pp. 61, 62.

  CHAPTER 20½: INCOMPLETE AND ABANDONED PROJECTS

  1. Segar, “Dictionary Making,” p. 210; Dressman, “Walt Whitman’s Plans,” p. 463; Warren, Walt Whitman’s Language Experiment, pp. 41–42; and Folsom, Walt Whitman’s Native Representations, p. 16.

  2. Read, “Projected English Dictionaries.”

  3. Osselton, “First English Dictionary?” pp. 175–76.

  4. Stray, Classical Dictionaries, p. 59.

  5. Sánchez, “Evolution of the Spanish Dictionary,” p. 137.

  6. Considine, Academy Dictionaries, p. 168.

  7. Urban, Nouveau sistême, p. 54.

  8. See Hahn, Fachkommunikation, p. 38.

  9. Considine, Academy Dictionaries, pp. 80–92.

  10. Hogg, “Bolshaia Sovetskaia Entsiklopediia,” pp. 17–18.

  11. See Stockwell, A History of Information Storage and Retrieval, p. 109.

  12. Appiah and Gates, Africana, p. ix.

  13. Appiah and Gates, Africana, pp. ix–x.

  14. Keller and Fontenot, Re-cognizing W. E. B. DuBois, p. 73.

  CHAPTER 21: THE FOUNDATION STONE

  1. See Campbell and Pryce, Library, p. 46.

  2. See Whitmarsh, Ancient Greek Literature, p. 128.

  3. Campbell and Pryce, Library, pp. 73–74.

  4. See Manguel, Library at Night, pp. 52–53.

  5. Stockwell, History of Information Storage, p. 140.

  6. See Burke, Social History of Knowledge, pp. 92–93.

  7. Miller, Prince of Librarians, p. 14.

  8. Miller, Prince of Librarians, p. 143.

  9. Cutter, “New Catalogue of Harvard College Library,” p. 104.

  10. Panizzi, Catalogue, 1:v.

  11. Panizzi, Catalogue, 1:vi.

  12. Panizzi, Catalogue, 1:vi.

  13. Panizzi, Catalogue, 1:vii.

  14. The best accounts are McCrimmon, Power, Politics, and Print, and Chaplin, GK.

  15. Alston and Jannetta, Bibliography, p. 20.

  16. Bakewell, Manual of Cataloguing Practice, p. 19.

  17. Stockwell, History of Information Storage and Retrieval, p. 144.

  18. Katz, Cuneiform to Computer, p. 311.

  19. Katz, Cuneiform to Computer, p. 311.

  20. See Burke, Social History of Knowledge, p. 93.

  21. See Cutter, “New Catalogue,” p. 97.

  22. Sonderland, review of National Union Catalog, p. 271.

  23. Hoyle, “Superlatives and Compromises,” p. 235.

  24. An up-to-the-minute tally of WorldCat’s holdings is at http://www.oclc.org/worldcat/watch-worldcat-grow.en.html.

  25. See DeZelar-Tiedman, “Proportion of NUC Pre-56 Titles.”

  26. Cutter, “New Catalogue,” p. 123.

  27. John Overholt (@john_overholt), Twitter posts, July 29, 2014.

  28. Cutter, “New Catalogue,” p. 129.

  CHAPTER 21½: INDEX LEARNING

  1. Carr, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”

  2. Witty, “Early Indexing Techniques,” p. 141.

  3. Pope, Dunciad, 1.277–80.

  4. Grub Street Journal no. 322 (February 26, 1735/36).

  5. Richardson, Correspondence, 2:229.

  6. Tankard, “Reading Lists,” p. 349.

  7. Plato, Phaedrus, in Works, 1:610.

  CHAPTER 22: THE GOOD LIFE

  1. Graves, Life & Letters, p. 12.

  2. Graves, Life & Letters, p. 23.

  3. Graves, Life & Letters, p. 33.

  4. Graves, Life & Letters, p. 133.

  5. Graves, Life & Letters, p. 44.

  6. Graves, Life & Letters, p. 156.

  7. Graves, Life & Letters, p. 254.

  8. Graves, Life & Letters, p. 205.

  9. Grove, Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 1:v.

  10. Graves, Life & Letters, p. 228.

  11. Graves, Life & Letters, p. 285.

  12. Graves, Life & Letters, p. 293.

  13. Graves, Life & Letters, pp. 282, 2
92.

  14. Post, “How I Came,” p. 64.

  15. Post, “How I Came,” p. 4.

  16. Post, “How I Came,” pp. 4, 56.

  17. Post, Etiquette, pp. xiii–xiv.

  18. Post, Etiquette, pp. 1, 71, 154, 506.

  19. Post, Etiquette, p. 4.

  20. Post, Etiquette, pp. 6, 7.

  21. Post, Etiquette, pp. 58, 122, 194, 567, 544, 144.

  22. Post, Etiquette, pp. 152–53, 20, 18–19.

  23. Post, Etiquette, p. 34.

  24. “Emily Price Post,” in Encyclopedia of World Biography.

  25. Poole, English Parnassus, sig. a7v–a8r.

  CHAPTER 22½: SOME UNLIKELY REFERENCE BOOKS

  1. Stavans, Dictionary Days, p. 63.

  CHAPTER 23: PRESUMED PURITY

  1. Vitz, Sigmund Freud’s Christian Unconscious, p. 112.

  2. Merck, Merck’s Index, p. iii.

  3. Merck, Merck’s Index, pp. iii–iv, vii–viii.

  4. Merck, Merck’s Index, p. iv.

  5. The American Monthly Microscopical Journal 10 (April 1889): 94.

  6. Merck, Merck’s Index, p. v.

  7. Merck, Merck’s Index, p. vi.

  8. Annals of Gynecology and Pediatry 3 (1890): 126.

  9. Merck, Merck’s Manual, p. 5.

  10. Grotzinger, review of Merck Index.

  11. Chemical Rubber Company, Handbook, p. 3.

  12. Chemical Rubber Company, Handbook, p. 8.

  13. Chemical Rubber Company, Handbook, p. 3.

  14. Davis and Schmidt, Guide to Information Sources, p. 88.

  15. Powell, Handbooks and Tables.

  16. Thorndike, “L’Encyclopédie and the History of Science,” p. 361.

  CHAPTER 23½: AT NO EXTRA COST!

  1. Dille, “The Dictionary in Abstract,” p. 198.

  2. Murray, Caught in the Web of Words, p. 251.

  3. See Béjoint, Lexicography of English, p. 2.

  4. Watts, “Encyclopédie Méthodique,” p. 356.

  5. Oldenburg, “Consummate Consumer.”

  6. Louise Cook, Associated Press story, May 26, 1978; see also Stockwell, History of Information Storage and Retrieval p. 133.

  7. Kogan, Great EB, p. 303.

  8. Kogan, Great EB, p. 300.

  9. Kogan, Great EB, p. 306.

  10. Kogan, Great EB, p. 303.

  11. Oldenburg, “Consummate Consumer.”

  12. LaBelle, “Salesman Must Say.”

  13. Berger, “What’s New in Encyclopedias.”

  14. “Out of Bounds.”

  CHAPTER 24: FULL AND AUTHORITATIVE INFORMATION

  1. Kafker, “William Smellie’s Edition,” p. 172.

  2. Catholic Encyclopedia and Its Makers, p. iii.

  3. “J. K.,” “Catholics and the New ‘Encyclopedia Britannica,’ ” pp. 202–3; Keogil, “‘Encyclopedia Britannica’ and the History of the Church,” pp. 377, 381.

  4. Catholic Encyclopedia, 1:v.

  5. Catholic Encyclopedia, 1:v–vi.

  6. Catholic Encyclopedia and Its Makers, p. iv.

  7. Hogg, “Bolshaia Sovetskaia Entsiklopediia,” p. 29.

  8. Hogg, “Bolshaia Sovetskaia Entsiklopediia,” p. 18.

  9. Hogg, “Bolshaia Sovetskaia Entsiklopediia,” pp. 23–24.

  10. Hogg, “Bolshaia Sovetskaia Entsiklopediia,” p. 28.

  11. Hogg, “Bolshaia Sovetskaia Entsiklopediia,” p. 31.

  12. Einbinder, Myth of the Britannica, p. 19.

  13. Hogg, “Bolshaia Sovetskaia Entsiklopediia,” p. 53.

  14. Kołakowski, Main Currents, p. 903.

  15. “Big Red Book.”

  16. Stockwell, History of Information Storage and Retrieval, p. 126.

  17. Hirsch, “Culture and Literacy,” pp. 36, 45.

  CHAPTER 24½: UNPERSONS

  1. See Weinrich, Lethe, p. 33, and Hedrick, History and Silence, pp. 94–95.

  2. Weinrich, Lethe, p. 33.

  3. Knight, Beria, p. 3.

  4. Hedrick, History and Silence, p. 92.

  CHAPTER 25: NOTHING SPECIAL

  1. Newman, Lounger’s Common-place Book, 1:iii.

  2. Olmsted, Getting into Guinness, p. 36.

  3. Watson, “World’s Unlikeliest Bestseller.”

  4. Olmsted, Getting into Guinness, p. 46.

  5. Olmsted, Getting into Guinness, p. 47.

  6. Whittington, “Unbeatable,” p. 139.

  7. http://www.book-of-records.info/1950s.html.

  8. See Olmsted, Getting into Guinness, p. 34.

  9. Cavendish, “Publication of the Guinness Book.”

  10. Hanson, “Harnessing the Guinness Effect,” p. 165.

  11. Watson, “World’s Unlikeliest Bestseller.”

  12. Hanson, “Harnessing the Guinness Effect,” p. 165.

  13. Watson, “World’s Unlikeliest Bestseller.”

  14. Schott’s Original Miscellany, p. 5.

  15. McCrum, “God Bless You,” p. 19.

  16. Anon., review of Schott’s Food & Drink Miscellany.

  17. Luce, “Vital Irrelevance.”

  18. Gutin, “How Big Is a D-Cup?”

  EPILOGUE: THE WORLD’S INFORMATION

  1. See Maritain, Dream of Descartes, pp. 13–26.

  2. Cottingham, Cambridge Companion, p. 31.

  3. Yeo, Encyclopaedic Visions, p. 4.

  4. Campbell and Pryce, Library, p. 39.

  5. See Collison, Encyclopaedias, p. 2.

  6. Stockwell, History of Information Storage and Retrieval, p. 21.

  7. Burke, Social History of Knowledge, p. 175.

  8. Yeo, “Lost Encyclopedias,” p. 47.

  9. Wells, World Brain, p. 11.

  10. Smith, Towards a Living Encyclopædia, p. 28.

  11. See Yeo, “Lost Encyclopedias,” p. 62.

  12. Adams, Hitchhiker’s Guide, p. 7.

  13. Lih, Wikipedia Revolution, p. xv.

  14. Lih, Wikipedia Revolution, p. 14.

  15. Lih, Wikipedia Revolution, p. 112.

  16. Schiff, “Know It All.”

  17. Baker, “Google’s Earth.”

  18. Baker, “Charms of Wikipedia.”

  19. Jaschick, “Stand against Wikipedia.”

  20. Dyson, “How We Know,” p. 10.

  INDEX

  “The A.B.C.” (Le Maire), here

  Académie Française, here, here, here

  Accademia della Crusca, here, here, here, here, here

  Adelung, Johann Christoph, here

  Africana (Appiah and Gates), here

  Alexander the Great, here

  Alexandria, Library of, here, here, here, here

  alphabet, development of, here

  alphabetization. See also classification

  alternative schemes for, here

  Chinese characters and, here, here

  early reference works and, here, here, here

  electronic reference works and, here

  history of, here

  practical issues in, here, here

  Amarakosha, here

  Amarasimha, here

  Amenemope, here

  An American Dictionary of the English Language (Webster), here, here, here

  Anatomy Descriptive and Surgical (Gray and Carter), here, here

  Antiquitates rerum humanarum et divinarum (Varro), here

  Apianus, Petrus, here

  Apollonius the Sophist, here

  Approaching Elegance. See Erya (Erh-ya)

  Aquinas, Thomas, here

  Ardens, Radulfus, here

  Aristophanes of Byzantium, here

  Aristotle, here, here, here, here

  Aristotle’s Master-Piece, here

  Arithmetica logarithmica (Briggs), here

  Ash, John, here

  The Assyrian Dictionary, here

  Astronomia instaurata progymnasmata (Brahe), here

  astronomy

  history of, here

  logarithm tables in, here

  star and planetary tables, herer />
  star maps, here

  stars naming system, here

  As We May Think (Bush), here

  Átaktoi glôssai (Philitas of Cos), here, here

  Atlas (Mercator), here

  Atlas coelestis (Flamsteed), here

  Avicenna, here

  Babylonia, legal code of, here, here

  Bacon, Francis, here, here

  Bailey, Nathan, here

  Baker, Nicholson, here, here

  Balbus, Johannes, here

  Bald, here, here

  Bartlett, John, here, here

  Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations, here

  Bartolomeo of San Concordio, here

  The Basilica, here

  Bayer, Johann, here, here

  Bayle, Pierre, here, here, here

  Beauties of Shakespear (Dodd), here

  Beaver, Sir Hugh, here

  Beeton’s Dictionary of Universal Information, here

  Bell, Andrew, here

  Betham, Matilda, here

  Bible

  Babylonian law and, here

  and book, history of, here

  on information overload, here, here

  selection of books for, here

  works on, here, here, here

  Bibliotheca universalis (Gesner), here

  Biographical Dictionary of the Celebrated Women (Betham), here

  Black’s Law Dictionary, here

  Blount, Thomas, here, here, here

  Bol’shaia sovetskaia entsiklopediia, here, here

  book(s), history of, here, here

  Book of Healing (Bald), here, here

  Boston Buriensis, here

  Boswell, James, here, here, here

  Bradshaw’s Railway Time Tables, here

  Brahe, Tycho, here, here, here

  Brewer, Ebenezer Cobham, here

  Briggs, Henry, here

  Brockhaus Enzyklopädie, here

  Browne, Thomas, here

  Brunel, Isambard Kingdom, here

  Bukharin, Nikolai, here, here, here

  Burchfield, Robert, here

  Burnell, Arthur Coke, here

  Bush, Vannevar, here

  Byzantine Empire, law code of, here

  Callimachus, here

  Calmet, Antoine Augustin, here

  Canon of Medicine (Avicenna), here

  Capellanus, Andreas, here

  Carroll, Lewis, here, here

  Carter, Henry Vandyke, here, here, here

  Cartwright, Samuel, here

  Cassiodorus, Flavius Marcus Aurelius, here, here, here, here

  Catalogue of Printed Books in the Library of the British Museum, here

  Catalogus scriptorum ecclesiae (Boston Buriensis), here

  Catholic Church. See Index librorum prohibitorum

  The Catholic Encyclopedia, here

  Catholicon (Balbus), here

  Cato the Censor, here, here

 

‹ Prev