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Learn how information professionals are addressing the electronic
resource issues being faced in their own libraries and around the
world! This informative volume gives you an up-close look at the
increasingly important role that electronic serials play in the
overall library collection, today and in the future. It addresses
many of the themes, problems, and questions raised by this
fast-evolving medium, including e-journal publishing issues,
troubleshooting, and accreditation issues, as well as e-reserves,
e-books, and more. In E-Serials Collection Management: Transitions,
Trends, and Technicalities, library professionals from the United
States, Canada, United Kingdom, and Australia discuss these issues,
the problems they have faced, and the solutions they have developed
for them. From the editor: It is my belief that e-serials will
continue to emerge as the key players in the library world, as the
physical library gradually and inexorably gives way to the virtual
library. As e-journals insinuate themselves throughout the
infrastructures of libraries and expand their reach globally, the
issues addressed in this book are becoming of concern to all
librarians, not just the electronic resources and information
technology specialists. Librarians all over the world are
struggling with how to manage electronic serials and the issues
associated with them. In this book, readers will see how library
professionals just like themselves deal with electronic journals,
their transitions, trends, and technicalities. With helpful graphs,
figures, and charts making the information in the book easily
accessible and understandable, E-Serials Collection Management:
Transitions, Trends, and Technicalities will increase your
understanding of: the interrelationship between pricing, licensing,
technological aspects, and proximity to publishers and
librariesfrom the point of view of a leading global subscription
agent the benefits and pitfalls of using vendors/publishers,
third-party providers, and subscription agents for electronic
journal services how information professionals are currently
developing and cataloging online materialswith a survey of 70
libraries! the IP ranges vs. passwords conundrum the advantages of
joining a consortium to make journals available to users at a lower
cost to your library how to determine the amount of usage your
electronic products are getting claiming and troubleshooting
e-journalswith a fascinating case study from UCLA's biomedical
library how to efficiently handle electronic articles destined for
a reserve collection how to select an e-book model that will
satisfy your users and your staff open-access systems and
softwareand what they mean to your institution regional
accreditation for e-serials using a database-driven approach to
manage e-resources and more!
Learn how information professionals are addressing the electronic
resource issues being faced in their own libraries and around the
world! This informative volume gives you an up-close look at the
increasingly important role that electronic serials play in the
overall library collection, today and in the future. It addresses
many of the themes, problems, and questions raised by this
fast-evolving medium, including e-journal publishing issues,
troubleshooting, and accreditation issues, as well as e-reserves,
e-books, and more. In E-Serials Collection Management: Transitions,
Trends, and Technicalities, library professionals from the United
States, Canada, United Kingdom, and Australia discuss these issues,
the problems they have faced, and the solutions they have developed
for them. From the editor: It is my belief that e-serials will
continue to emerge as the key players in the library world, as the
physical library gradually and inexorably gives way to the virtual
library. As e-journals insinuate themselves throughout the
infrastructures of libraries and expand their reach globally, the
issues addressed in this book are becoming of concern to all
librarians, not just the electronic resources and information
technology specialists. Librarians all over the world are
struggling with how to manage electronic serials and the issues
associated with them. In this book, readers will see how library
professionals just like themselves deal with electronic journals,
their transitions, trends, and technicalities. With helpful graphs,
figures, and charts making the information in the book easily
accessible and understandable, E-Serials Collection Management:
Transitions, Trends, and Technicalities will increase your
understanding of: the interrelationship between pricing, licensing,
technological aspects, and proximity to publishers and
librariesfrom the point of view of a leading global subscription
agent the benefits and pitfalls of using vendors/publishers,
third-party providers, and subscription agents for electronic
journal services how information professionals are currently
developing and cataloging online materialswith a survey of 70
libraries! the IP ranges vs. passwords conundrum the advantages of
joining a consortium to make journals available to users at a lower
cost to your library how to determine the amount of usage your
electronic products are getting claiming and troubleshooting
e-journalswith a fascinating case study from UCLA's biomedical
library how to efficiently handle electronic articles destined for
a reserve collection how to select an e-book model that will
satisfy your users and your staff open-access systems and
softwareand what they mean to your institution regional
accreditation for e-serials using a database-driven approach to
manage e-resources and more!
Authors of the Middle Ages is a new series designed for research
and reference. Each part, by an expert on the subject, gives an
account of the facts known about a particular Author's life and
immediate historical context, together with a review of subsequent
scholarship. This is supported by citation of all known
contemporary references; a dated and classified list of manuscripts
and editions; a bibliography of secondary sources; and appendices
listing or printing the key literary and documentary sources. The
aim is to combine, in one compact work, a bibliography of a
medieval author with all the information needed for further
research. Each will be available individually, or in a collection
with three other contemporary Authors. Authors of the Middle Ages
is divided into two sub-series, English Writers of the Late Middle
Ages and historical and Religious Writers of the Latin West.
First published in 1997. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
This is the first volume of a critical edition of the last of John
Trevisa's major translations (previously unavailable in print). The
"De regimine principum," a Latin treatise on the education of
princes, was composed originally for the French King Philip the
Fair (1238-1314) and translated by Cornishman John Trevisa (c.
1342-1402), chaplain and man of letters to Thomas IV Lord Berkeley,
a baronial representative in the deposition of the English King
Richard II in 1399. The work comprises 182 folios of the Bodleian
manuscript Digby 233, which is the only surviving copy of the
translation-perhaps even copied and corrected from Trevisa's
autograph.
This edition will be of great value to scholars interested in the
reception and transmission of "De regimine principum," which with
its nearly 300 known surviving manuscripts-55 of them having a
medieval English provenance-in Latin and most European vernaculars,
was one of the most popular and influential political/didactic
works of the later Middle Ages.
The second volume of this edition will explicitly place the text
and its author within a larger historical and linguistic context
and will include textual variants and a glossary.
John Trevisa (ca.1342-1402), perhaps the greatest of Middle English
prose translators of Latin texts into English, was almost an exact
contemporary of Geoffrey Chaucer. Trevisa was born in Cornwall,
studies at Oxford, and was instituted vicar of Berkeley, a position
he held until his death. Over a period of thirty-five years eminent
medievalist David Fowler has pieced together an account of
Trevisa's life and times by diligently seeking out documents
bearing on his activities and translations. This has resulted in a
cultural history of fourtheenth-century England that ranges from
the administrative, geographical, and linguistic status of Cornwall
to the curriculum of medieval university education, and from
religious and secular conflicts to the administration of a
substantial provincial household and the role of its aristocratic
keepers in the Hundred Years War. Fowler provides an analysis of
Trevis's known translations the "Gospel of Nicodemus", "Dialogus
inter Militem et Clericum", FitzRalph's "Defensio Curatorum", the
"Polychronicon", "De Regimine Principum" and "De Proprietatibus
Rerum." He also advances the hypothesis that Trevisa was one of the
scholars responsible for the first complete translation of the
scriptures into English: the Wycliffite Bible. An appendix contains
a collection of biographical and historical references designed to
illustrate Fowler's contention that Trevisa may have been
responsible for the revisions of "Piers the Plowman" now known as
the B and C texts.
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