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<div2><head>Introduction</head><p>I've begun to collect and curate library-related journals, and this posting introduces the process.</p>
  <p>As a librarian I am interested in the collecting, organizing, preserving and disseminating data, information, and knowledge. With the advent of the Internet, the processes used to accomplish these goals increasingly includes the use of computers. Moreover, it is important to use computers to not only automate tasks but also to add value (curate) the result. I am intereted in applying this process to library-related journals.</p>
</div2>
  <div2>
  <head>Creating the collection</head>
  <p>To these ends, I began by identifying library-related titles listed in the venerable Directory of Open Access Journals (<xref url='https://doaj.org'>DOAJ</xref>
). I limited my selections to titles published using Open Journal Systems (<xref url='https://pkp.sfu.ca/ojs/'>OJS</xref>
) because titles published using OJS robustly support a protocol called Open Access Initiative-Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (<xref url='https://www.openarchives.org/pmh/'>OAI-PMH</xref>
). In the end, I identified about thirty titles. I used these titles as input to a suite of software called <xref url='https://github.com/ericleasemorgan/ojs-toolbox-redux'>OJS Toolbox Redux</xref>
. This resulted in a set of bibliographic databases as well as a cache of all the articles from each journal. Finally, I transformed each cache into a data set (affectionately called "study carrels") using the <xref url='https://reader-toolbox.readthedocs.io'>Distant Reader Toolbox</xref>
.</p>
  <p>Below is a list of the titles I have collected so far, and each is linked to a collection of their articles - a study carrel. Each item has exactly the same layout, which makes them very computable. For example, <xref url='https://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/information-technology-and-libraries/cache/'>all the articles from Information Technology &amp; Libraries</xref>
 are located in its cache directory, and a <xref url='https://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/information-technology-and-libraries/etc/bibliography.txt'>rudimentary bibliography</xref>
 of the same is saved in its etc directory.</p>
  
  <p>To further understand study carrels, puruse the <xref url='https://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/tutorial/'>tutorial</xref>
 which includes the things I've been reading for the past two years, and then browse the library-related titles (carrels) below:</p>
  <p rend='center'>
  <xref url='http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/canadian-journal-of-academic-librarianship'>Canadian Journal of Academic Librarianship</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/college-and-research-libraries-news">College and Research Libraries News</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/college-and-research-libraries">College and Research Libraries</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/evidence-based-library-and-information-practice">Evidence Based Library and Information Practice</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/information-technology-and-libraries">Information Technology and Libraries</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/international-journal-of-digital-curation">International Journal of Digital Curation</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/international-journal-of-information-diversity-&amp;-inclusion">International Journal of Information Diversity &amp; Inclusion</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/international-journal-of-librarianship">International Journal of Librarianship</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/issues-in-science-and-technology-libraries">Issues in Science and Technology Libraries</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/journal-of-civic-information">Journal of Civic Information</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/journal-of-copyright-in-education-and-librarianship">Journal ofCopyright in Education and Librarianship</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/journal-of-information-literacy">Journal of Information Literacy</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/journal-of-rare-books-manuscripts-and-cultural-heritage">Journal of Rare Books Manuscripts and Cultural Heritage</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/journal-of-the-canadian-health-libraries-association">Journal of the Canadian Health Libraries Association</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/journal-of-the-european-association-for-health-information-and-libraries">Journal of the European Association for Health Information and Libraries</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/journal-of-the-medical-library-association">Journal of the Medical Library Association</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/knowledge-creation-dissemination-and-preservation-studies">Knowledge Creation Dissemination and Preservation Studies</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/liber-quarterly:-the-journal-of-european-research-libraries">Liber Quarterly: The Journal of European Research Libraries</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/library-and-information-research">Library and Information Research</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/north-carolina-libraries">North Carolina Libraries</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/partnership:-the-canadian-journal-of-library-and-information-practice-and-research">Partnership: the Canadian Journal of Library and Information Practice and Research</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/pennsylvania-libraries:-research-&amp;-practice">Pennsylvania Libraries: Research &amp; Practice</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/tcb:-technical-services-in-religion-&amp;-theology">TCB: Technical Services in Religion &amp; Theology</xref> *  
  <xref url="http://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/theological-librarianship">Theological Librarianship</xref></p></div2>
  <div2>
    <head>Initial observations</head>
    <p>A rigorous analysis of the collection is beyond the scope of this posting. After all, the collection includes about 22 thousand articles and 79 million words. (By comparison, Moby Dick is about .25 million words long.)</p>
    <p>That said, some initial observations can be made, especially concerning extent. For example, College &amp; Research Libraries (CRL) is by far the largest collection at 7,000 items and 30 million words, which is almost half of the whole corpus. This is because the title goes back to 1939. (The oldest item in CRL is " 
    <xref url="https://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/college-and-research-libraries/cache/crl-9757.pdf">Introducing 'College and Research Libraries: Why Another Library Journal</xref>" by A. F. Kuhlman.) By comparison, Information Technology &amp; Libraries (ITAL) includes 790 items and 3.5 million words. It dates back to 1968. (The oldest item in ITAL is " 
    <xref url="https://distantreader.org/stacks/carrels/information-technology-and-libraries/cache/ital-2924.pdf">Brown University Library Fund Accounting System</xref>" by Robert Wedgeworth).</p>
    


    
    <p>It is also interesting to compare &amp; contrast the use of words between these two titles. Bigram analysis highlights the prominance of research in one and Web technologies in the other. The same pattern manifests itself when examining the statistically significant keywords:</p>

<p><table rend='center'>
<row>
<cell><figure url='http://distantreader.org/blog/library-journals/crl-bigrams-cloud.png' /><lb/>CRL bigrams</cell>
<cell><figure url='http://distantreader.org/blog/library-journals/ital-bigrams-cloud.png' /><lb/>ITAL bigrams</cell>
</row>
</table></p>

<p><table rend='center'>
<row>
<cell><figure url='http://distantreader.org/blog/library-journals/crl-keywords-cloud.png' /><lb/>CRL keywords</cell>
<cell><figure url='http://distantreader.org/blog/library-journals/ital-keywords-cloud.png' /><lb/>CRL keywords</cell>
</row>
</table></p>


    <p>Finally, in this analysis, one can concordance for phrases like "libraries are" to see how libraries are defined. Each line below is preceded with "libraries are". The first set is from CRL, and the second set is from ITAL:</p>
    <list type='bulleted'>
      <item>always insufficient to meet the demand. in the years to come, withdrawals of rn</item>
      <item>an index of institutional excellence, as investigators have found, the survival</item>
      <item>dealing with printing in reference computer labs. the survey asked for quantita</item>
      <item>generally not required to provide cost accountability or to justify the costs a</item>
      <item>not neutral spaces: social justice advocacy in librarianship," library journal</item>
    </list>
    <list type='bulleted'>
      <item>already exploring creative approaches to providing internet access for these un</item>
      <item>facing considerable infrastructure management issues at a time when library use</item>
      <item>now interested in incorporating new web technologies into their offerings and o</item>
      <item>torn between the values of providing safe access for younger patrons and broad</item>
      <item>valued more than the internet for providing accurate information, privacy, and</item>
    </list>
    <p>The complete <xref url='http://distantreader.org/blog/library-journals/crl-libraries-are.txt'>concordancing for CRL</xref>
 and the complete <xref url='http://distantreader.org/blog/library-journals/ital-libraries-are.txt'>concordacing of ITAL</xref>
 nis available here.</p>
  </div2>
  <div2>
    <head>Summary</head>
    <p>For a good time, I have begun to create a collection of library-related journals and curate the results.</p>
    <p>In this day and age, it is not sufficent for libraries to stop at collection, but instead, they must add value, provide some interpretation, and "Save the time of the reader." In the future and in my copius spare time, I hope to do some more curation against this collection and share additional observations.</p>
    <p>Fun with librarianship in the 21st Century.</p>
  </div2>
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