{"id":18516,"date":"2020-02-06T14:00:17","date_gmt":"2020-02-06T19:00:17","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=18516"},"modified":"2020-02-10T09:50:05","modified_gmt":"2020-02-10T14:50:05","slug":"card-tricks-the-decline-fall-of-a-bibliographic-tool","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2020\/02\/06\/card-tricks-the-decline-fall-of-a-bibliographic-tool\/","title":{"rendered":"Card Tricks: The Decline & Fall of a Bibliographic Tool"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Stephen J. Greenberg ~<\/em><\/p>\n

\"View<\/a>
Aerial View of the NLM Rotunda and Card Catalog, ca. 1964
National Library of Medicine #101445862<\/em><\/a><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

There was a time, not so very long ago, when card catalogues were pretty much synonymous with libraries. You really could not imagine one without the other. As late as the 1960s, some library buildings were architecturally designed around their physical catalogues. The current main building of the National Library of Medicine is a good example.<\/p>\n

The move away from such catalogues began a long time ago. Henriette Davidson Avram, working with a team at the Library of Congress in the late 60s, developed the MARC format<\/a> that would pave the way for all future computerized library catalogues. It has now been over thirty years since NLM removed its main card catalogue, although some remnants persist. After all, no major research library ever had just one card catalogue; there were always several, all for different purposes. Cards were the physical manifestation of the collective librarian memory, and there were a LOT of things to remember.<\/p>\n

The retrospective conversion of most card catalogues to electronic formats, and the overall passage of time, have made it increasingly necessary to describe to younger visitors what a card catalogue is (or rather, was). There are, however, some of us still in the profession who remember cards, if not always fondly.\u00a0 One needed specialized training to type cards.\u00a0 It was an art in itself, and it has become a lost one. Particularized use of standard punctuation marks, initials, and seemingly bizarre use of spacing were all part of the cataloguers\u2019 codebook. Nothing was ever random, however. The seemingly idiosyncratic spacing and punctuation allowed the cataloguer, and the informed researcher, to identify the author and title on a given card, even if the language and the character set were strange to the user. Going back even further, when cards were handwritten, special penmanship had to be learned, a throwback (even then) to the late Middle Ages, when each royal government office had a prescribed script.\u00a0 One could identify the source of the document simply by recognizing the script style<\/a> (for example, the so-called \u201cChancery Hand\u201d).<\/p>\n