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Ann Hartness (born March 11, 1936) is an academic research librarian who was Head Librarian of the University of Texas (UT) Nettie Lee Benson Latin American Collection from 2002 to 2008. The library, established in 1926,〔(''Discovery - Nettie Lee Benson Latin American Collection''; vol. 16, no. 1 )〕 is the largest dedicated to Latin America in the United States,〔(Benson Collection )〕 and is part of the Perry-Castañeda Library, the country's fifth-largest academic library. Retired in 2008, Hartness was a member of the first broad generation of women to rise to professional academic leadership positions in the US. Hartness worked for 40 years at UT Austin, beginning as a serials cataloger in 1969.〔''Eyes of Texas Magazine'', University of Texas, April 15, 2002〕 Her assistance has been acknowledged in original research by numerous scholars in the humanities and social sciences. Hartness’ focus on Brazil and collecting trips there helped make the UT library a global resource for study of that country. In 2003, Brazil named her a Commander of the National Order of the Southern Cross, the highest honor granted by that country to non-Brazilians.〔News release, Nettie Lee Benson Latin American Collection, University of Texas. April 10, 2003.〕 Hartness also directed the United States Library of Congress field office in Brazil in 1989-90.〔(SALALM )〕 ==Biography== Hartness has been active since the 1970s in the permanent Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials (SALALM), a nationwide collaborative effort among research libraries, founded in 1956. She was elected Honorary Member of the SALALM board of directors (Secretariat) in 2008.〔 In 1972-73, while an intern at Brazil’s National Library in Rio de Janeiro, Hartness began compiling an index for researchers of the statistics provided during the 19th century in annual reports by the governors (“presidents”) of the 20 provinces of the then Brazilian Empire. The work spanned 59 years of reports, from 1830 to 1889.〔''Subject Guide to Statistics in the Presidential Reports of the Brazilian Provinces, 1830–1889'', Ann Hartness, Institute for Latin American Studies, University of Texas.〕 This led to a comprehensive published guide for scholars, the 1977 ''Subject Guide to Statistics in the Presidential Reports of the Brazilian Provinces, 1830–1889'', published by the Institute for Latin American Studies at the University of Texas. This later became an interactive online guide.〔(Hartness Guide to Statistical Information - Center for Research Libraries )〕 Hartness’s published works also include a review of reference books since 1965 concerning Brazil, first published in English in 1990 and updated in Portuguese in 1999 (see list of published works). While much of Hartness’ work has focused on Brazil, she also published in 1995 a guide to political street literature in Guatemala during the early Cold War: ''Revolution and Counterrevolution in Guatemala, 1944–1963''. A recurrent theme in her collecting and cataloging work has been material not available from commercial publishing houses, such as publications of government agencies, which she has described as “excellent but poorly publicized reference sources.”〔Subject Guide to Statistics in the Presidential Reports of the Brazilian Provinces, 1830–1889'', Ann Hartness, Institute for Latin American Studies, University of Texas.〕 From annual collecting trips across Brazil, Hartness brought back tens of thousands of volumes to Austin, much of it collected from such state, local, and federal agencies. Another focus has been “ephemera,” that is pamphlets, booklets, and other written material of interest to researchers but produced by unions, churches, political parties, etc., and so rarely made available in libraries. Hartness was a pioneer in the micro-filming of Latin American library materials, in an effort to increase the efficiency of academic research in the field. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Ann Hartness」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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