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Gracias a la iniciativa de William Denton de digitalizar una grabación de 1964 donde el matemático hindú Shiyali Ramamrita Ranganathan (1892-1972, padre de la clasificación colonada e impulsor de las clasificaciones facetadas y autor de los principios fundamentales de la biblioteconomía) relata su opinión sobre los trabajos de Melvy Dewey (1851-1931, creador del sistema de clasificación bibliográfica decimal que lleva su nombre, y el más usado en el mundo):

They never met, but they did correspond, and Ranganathan recounts that and four other anecdotes, including an amusing one he was told about Dewey conniving so that his female employees could enter his library by the front door and not the fire escape. (Ranganathan jokingly relates the number five to his Colon Classification.)

La calidad del sonido, como reconoce Denton, no es muy buena, pero es quizá una de las pocas oportunidades que tenemos de escuchar al bibliotecario indio, y nada menos que hablar sobre otro de los grandes, afinen sus oídos y escuchen:

Ranganathan’s Monologue on Melvil Dewey (6 MB MP3).

ACTUALIZACIÓN:

David Weinberger ha tenido el detalle de invertir su tiempo en transcribir la grabación de Ranganathan y ya podemos leer la historia de su relación con Dewey.

Muy curioso el punto dedicado a la llegada de Dewey a la Universidad de Columbia, donde no estaba permitida la entrada a mujeres y Dewey se “vió” obligado a luchar contra el sistema:

when Dewey came to the Columbia University, he was insisting that he should have lady assistants. But the Columbia university in those days did not allow ladies into the university building. So the authorities would not allow it. But he would not have any other assistants. Then they found a compromise. The lady said that they agreed that the lady assistants of Melvil Dewey would be allowed to come into the building not through the main door but by the spiral service staircase in the back of the building. Well, that compromise was accepted. After some time, Melvil Dewey reported to the authorities that that spiral staircase was missing and that his students were unable to come into the building. Then they were in a great fix. Are they to put up another spiral and wait for a week or ten days without work in the library or what were they to do? Melvil Dewey I suppose did not even smile on that occasion for he was very very serious looking, and they said “Alright, I shall allow your lady assistants to come through the main door.” That’s a very remarkable experience I heard from that old student of Melvil Dewey.

[Via Librarian.net]


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