barstein
11-24-2007, 10:46 PM
So a very good friend has a class presentation (graduate level) on Monday and discovers, late this afternoon, that a paper she absolutely needs to acquire is unavailable at her university library (checked out, no digital version) and that there are no librarians on hand until Monday (only students who basically shrugged). I am not a librarian, but she is clearly exhausted and demoralized and so I'm trying to lend a hand and locate this (for free or cheap, of course):
Abes (http://www.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=970774939&searchurl=an%3DBurmester%252C%2BAndreas%26bi%3D0%2 6bx%3Doff%26ds%3D30%26sortby%3D2%26sts%3Dt%26x%3D8 2%26y%3D22)
Amazon (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/3781404242)
Google (http://books.google.com/books?id=KIq0HQAACAAJ&dq=Burmester,+Heilmann,+and+Zimmermann)
Reference to the specific essay she's after (footnote #59 on this page) (http://19thc-artworldwide.org/spring_02/articles/thom.shtml)
Edit: LOC entry (http://tinyurl.com/29c77w)
I have my kid with me and am somewhat limited on time, but I told her I'd do my best to help out and have begun the wide sweep. I'll hit every library in the region I know of, by www or by phone/email/chat where possible. So far I've searched a couple of library web sites and come up empty, and learned that NYPL Express (http://www.nypl.org/express/index.html) is open Monday through Thursday which isn't any help. Surely there is the reference equivalent to a hospital emergency room, only one that doesn't make you wait. If there is a librarian in the house who happens to know where to locate a somewhat obscure response to a 1996 international symposium on Art History, in which will presumably exist this one particular essay, I would be much obliged. The two long-time librarians whom I know personally completely failed me and gave the weakest advice I could have hoped for (which is not all that dissimilar to many doctors I have known). Edit: Ironically, it was just this week when I decided I would take a foundation research course at a Journalism school just for my own sake.
Abes (http://www.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=970774939&searchurl=an%3DBurmester%252C%2BAndreas%26bi%3D0%2 6bx%3Doff%26ds%3D30%26sortby%3D2%26sts%3Dt%26x%3D8 2%26y%3D22)
Amazon (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/3781404242)
Google (http://books.google.com/books?id=KIq0HQAACAAJ&dq=Burmester,+Heilmann,+and+Zimmermann)
Reference to the specific essay she's after (footnote #59 on this page) (http://19thc-artworldwide.org/spring_02/articles/thom.shtml)
Edit: LOC entry (http://tinyurl.com/29c77w)
I have my kid with me and am somewhat limited on time, but I told her I'd do my best to help out and have begun the wide sweep. I'll hit every library in the region I know of, by www or by phone/email/chat where possible. So far I've searched a couple of library web sites and come up empty, and learned that NYPL Express (http://www.nypl.org/express/index.html) is open Monday through Thursday which isn't any help. Surely there is the reference equivalent to a hospital emergency room, only one that doesn't make you wait. If there is a librarian in the house who happens to know where to locate a somewhat obscure response to a 1996 international symposium on Art History, in which will presumably exist this one particular essay, I would be much obliged. The two long-time librarians whom I know personally completely failed me and gave the weakest advice I could have hoped for (which is not all that dissimilar to many doctors I have known). Edit: Ironically, it was just this week when I decided I would take a foundation research course at a Journalism school just for my own sake.