Erasmus+ intern in UCL Special Collections
By ucyliju, on 21 November 2019
My name is Ibolya Jurinka. I am spending 3 months in UCL Special Collections as an Erasmus+ intern. Erasmus+ is not only a student exchange programme; it also provides overseas opportunities for all employees wishing to gain practical learning experiences from partner organisations in higher education.
I come from Hungary. I have been working as a librarian at the University Library and Archives of the Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE).
I catalogue journals, especially retrospective cataloguing. I mostly work with materials from 19-20th century, but I have also catalogued periodicals from 17-18th century and also from the 21st century. This summer I catalogued the oldest journals of our library with one of my specialist rare-book colleagues. These are from the 16th century:
I like this work and find it interesting, so wanted to gain more experience in this area abroad. This autumn I am cataloguing Little Magazines here at UCL Special Collections, and I have organized an exhibition about the most interesting magazines.
Little Magazines Collection
Basic information about Little Magazines
(source: SOAR, Geoffrey: Little Magazines at University College London)
‘Little Magazines are those that publish creative, often innovative work, with little or no regard for commercial gain. They sometimes have very small print runs and may last for relatively few issues. Most of them are from 1960s-1970s. The library of University College London started to collect Little Magazines from 1964’. It is a subsection of Small Press Collection.
Most of the Little Magazines are literary journals; they focus especially on modern, 20th century poetry and prose.
We can find colourful art magazines too in the Little Magazines Collection:
Cataloguing of Little Magazines
Cataloguing of little magazines is hard, because:
- volume numbers and dates are often absent;
- it is often hard to tell if a magazine is current or not;
- many are published irregularly and often at widely spaced intervals;
- many do not appear in official current bibliographies;
- they are often visual and it is hard to identify the title.
Visual Poetry in the Little Magazines exhibition, Main Library Donaldson stairs
Some of the Little Magazines contain visual and concrete poetry. This type of poetry appeared in the 20th century and became very popular. The exhibition focuses on little magazines containing visual poetry, whose title begins with the letter ‘A’. If you are interested in this exhibition, you can visit it from 24th October 2019 to 11th of December 2019 in the Main Library, either side of the stairs to the Donaldson Library. For more information, see the leaflets next to the exhibition cases.