What is Documentation?: English Translation of the Classic French Text

What is Documentation?: English Translation of the Classic French Text

What is Documentation?: English Translation of the Classic French Text

What is Documentation?: English Translation of the Classic French Text

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Overview

Born in Paris in 1894, Suzanne Briet was active nationally and internationally in the development of what was then known as Documentation but would now be called Information Management or Information Science. In 1931, she participated in founding the Union Française des Organismes de Documentation (UFOD), the French analogue of the American Documentation Institute now called the American Society for Information Science and Technology. She was a leader in developing professional education for this new specialty and designed a plan for what would have been the first school of Documentation / Information Science worldwide, had it been established. In 1951, when a school of information science was finally established, Briet was the founding Director of Studies. She became Vice President of the International Federation for Documentation (FID) and acquired the nickname "Madame Documentation."

What is Documentation? relates this fascinating story and includes the first English translation of Briet's remarkable manifesto on the nature of documentation, Qu'est-ce que la documentation? (Paris: EDIT, 1951). A pamphlet of 48 pages, Part I sought to push the boundaries of the field beyond texts to include any material form of evidence ("Is a living animal a document?" she asked). Part II argued that a new and distinct profession was emerging. Part III urged the societal need for new and active documentary services.

This tract remains significant due to its continuing relevance towards understanding the nature, scope, and societal impacts of documents and documentation. Briet's modernist perspective, combined with semiotics, deserves attention now because it offers a sturdy and insightful alternative to the scientific, positivist view that has so dominated information science and which is increasingly questioned.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780810851092
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 03/07/2006
Pages: 84
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.02(h) x 0.23(d)

About the Author

Ronald E. Day is an assistant professor at Wayne State University.
Laurent Martinet works on the indexing and content management of databases at L'Express magazine, Paris, and he is a translator of English documents into French.
Hermina G. B. Anghelescu is assistant professor in the Library and Information Science Program at Wayne State University.

Table of Contents

Part 1 Preface Part 2 Acknowledgments Part 3 A Brief Biography of Suzanne Renée Briet Part 4 Suzanne Briet's What is Documentation? Part 5 "A Necessity of Our Time": Documentation as "Cultural Technique" in What is Documentation? Part 6 Writings by Suzanne Renée Briet: A Selective Bibliography Part 7 About the Editors and Contributors
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