For anyone who's going to ALA, the first talk should be interesting to many
of you.  Emily

Emily Bergman
Temple Sinai
Glendale, CA
emilyanneberg...@gmail.com





*From:* Lincove, David
*Sent:* Wednesday, May 24, 2017 12:09 PM
*To:* histor...@lists.ala.org
*Subject:* European Studies Research Forum at ALA Annual



*European Studies Research Forum at **ALA Annual Conference in Chicago*.



Saturday, June 24th, 4:30-5:30pm

Chicago Hilton, Stevens Center, Salon A-5



Sponsored by the ACRL West European Studies Research and Planning Committee
(Nickoal Eichmann, David Lincove, Tea Rokolj)



*PRESENTATIONS:*



*Gordon B. Anderson (University of Minnesota)*

*Books under Suspicion: Identifying Nazi-looted books in German library
collections *



Despite the persistent image of the Nazis being burners of books, in fact
they valued books enormously and used them in countless ways to achieve
their ideological and racial objectives.  Being pathological kleptocrats,
the Nazis stole everything from their enemies. During the years 1933-1945
they looted millions upon millions of books from personal and institutional
libraries for deposit into Nazi-run "research institutes" and for
acquisition by German libraries.  While settling many issues, the end of
the Cold War and the reunification of Germany, also opened up issues long
ignored, especially the issues in restoring looted property and wealth. In
late 1998, 44 governments (including Germany) and 13 NGOs adopted the
Washington Principles on Holocaust Era Assets, which included the
restitution of looted books and archives. Since 2002, with German
government support, libraries across Germany have undertaking projects to
identify looted books in their collections and make amends.  In the spring
of 2017 I visited several German libraries, and this paper is a report on
their ongoing efforts and the dynamics of the process. I offer a
preliminary assessment of their efforts to untangle and de-mystify the
origins of many of their holdings.





*Paula Mae Carns (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)*

*Saving the Macclesfield Psalter: The Curious History of an English
Medieval Manuscript*



In 2004 Sotheby's auction house in London made a startling discovery when
processing for sale the vast library of the Earl of Macclesfield in
Shirburn Castle (Oxfordshire, England): a previously unknown
fourteenth-century English illuminated psalter, now known as the
Macclesfield Psalter. Bound in with another devotional text, the psalter
had long been overlooked. The rarity of the piece (there are few such
surviving books) and the lavishness of the decoration (which fills most
pages) raised the price tag and thus it was no surprise that only the Getty
Museum was able to purchase it, for ₤1.7 million. In response and following
British law (which allows individuals and institutions in the UK to "buy
back" a work of art before export) the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge with
the help of the Art Fund launched a world-wide campaign to save this
"national" treasure, which included a BBC television series, exhibition and
numerous newspaper articles. The campaign was a huge success and the
manuscript went to Cambridge, where the book was probably made. In my
presentation I will examine the psalter's unusual contemporary history and
the rhetoric used in the print media campaign to "save" this book for
England.





*Jim Niessen (Rutgers University)*

*Heritage and Repatriation in the History of Habsburg and Hungarian
Archives*

How long has Hungary had a national archives? It’s a trick question: the
Hungarian National Archives (Magyar Nemzeti Levéltár) was created only in
2012 with the integration of the central repository of the country (Magyar
Országos Levéltár) and the county archives. The Országos Levéltár arose by
stages beginning in 1723 as the repository of the state offices of the
country. Formal definition of “the country” became more complicated after
1918, but Hungary’s archives fared better than those of Austria in the
sense that Hungary retained possession of major bodies of public records
for regions that were now part of neighboring countries—whereas many of the
records in Vienna were “repatriated” to Austria’s successor states. The
aspiration to create an archives “of the nation” arose well before 2012.
Today’s nation is cultural and sociological more than administrative, and
the archives increasingly shared the ambition of the National Library to
document Hungarians everywhere. Repositories in Hungary have accepted
donations by Hungarians in the diaspora for decades, but especially since
the establishment of the Mikes Kelemen Program in 2014 for the shipment to
Hungary. My paper will examine the results of the program and the
disadvantages of separating the national heritage of diaspora populations
from that of their host countries.









[image:
https://library.osu.edu/osulibraries/images/OSU-UniversityLibrariesTrueRed.png]



David Lincove

Professor

History, Public Affairs, Philosophy Librarian

Ohio State University Libraries

1858 Neil Ave.

Columbus, Ohio 43210
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