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Julius Hanauer: bio-bibliographical traces of a German special librarian, esperantist, and documentalist
Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.1164
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Publikationsdatum
2013
Sprache
English
Author
Institut
Enthalten in
Volume
62
Issue
2
Start Page
346
End Page
359
Citation
Library Trends, vol. 62 no. 2, 2013, p. 346-359.
Publisher DOI
Scopus ID
Publisher
The Johns Hopkins University Press
The German librarian Julius Hanauer, primarily known for his support of decimal classification in the 1920s, was an important link between Germany and the international bibliographic movement and documentation network in the first third of the twentieth century. Working in the early twentieth century at the Institut International de Bibliographie in Brussels, Hanauer had regular contact with members of the documentation community, such as Henri La Fontaine and Paul Otlet, and others outside Belgium, such as Wilhelm Ostwald. Tracing the facets of Hanauer’s activities and connections as an information pioneer mirrored the contemporary world of internationalism and documentation.
Schlagworte
Hanauer, Julius
Informationsgeschichte
Hanauer, Julius
information
documentation
history
esperanto movement
special librarian
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08_62_2_hapke_346_359.pdf
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1.71 MB
Format
Adobe PDF