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Blogger Indrajala said...

Very nice thoughts.

I've also enjoyed libraries in my travels.

When I was at Komazawa University (it is Soto Zen) in Tokyo doing my MA degree I was given unrestricted access to the basement archives. KU has many woodblock prints from the Edo period, to say nothing of all their modern secondary works on Buddhism, both in Japanese and English. A lot of the English works have clearly never been accessed since they were put on a shelf down there, so you handle mint condition editions of Conze's works.

Funny story: I once went down there, gathered a few books and took the elevator upstairs. The librarian then scolded me as the elevator was for staff and professors only. Here they trust me with unsupervised access to hundreds of millions of dollars worth of irreplaceable books, yet as a grad student I may not use the elevator.

Recently when I was in Japan for six weeks I went back to photocopy a number of old journal articles that are neither available online nor probably could be found outside of Japan. Although some old journals in Japan are digitized now, a lot of them I imagine won't be because of copyright issues. Whoever owns the rights can still reproduce them and sell them. Also the Japanese haven't quite gotten into the habit of pirating academic books, which incidentally become expensive collector's items over time.

Friday, October 31, 2014

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