Abstract :
The Carl W. Blegen Library of the American School of
Classical Studies at Athens contains one of the most comprehensive collections
of books on classical philology and the archaeology of Greece and the
eastern Mediterranean. Early in its history, an amateur librarian, Theodore
Woolsey Heermance, created an independent, highly detailed classification
system, which encompassed classical studies in all its facets. His system is
still used in the Blegen Library today. However, the discipline of classics
has changed considerably, especially in the last couple of decades, and
while the breadth of Heermance’s system (and, indeed, Heermance’s foresight)
is such that monographs in all areas of classical studies can be accommodated,
the system as a whole also serves a unique document of classical
scholarship a century ago. Moreover, because the letter designations have
not changed since 1903, it is possible to track trends in scholarship and publication
within fairly narrow subject headings. This article addresses not
only Heermance’s impressive classification system, but also the means by
which this static classification system can be used to draw conclusions about
the state of classical scholarship and the humanities in general in the twentieth
century. [Article copies available for a fee from The Haworth Document Delivery
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Keywords :
Classification , classical studies libraries , classical archaeology , classical scholarship