Religions at BNU Strasbourg
An article about the exhibitions in Religious Studies at the National Library and University of Strasbourg (BNU), has just published under the pen of Madeleine Zeller, curator and head of the center of excellence "Religious Studies" at the National Library and University of Strasbourg, and David-Georges Picard.
He appeared in the very official "Bulletin des bibliothèques de France" in January 2010.
Here's the link:
http://bbf.enssib.fr/consulter/bbf-2010-01-0040-008
And the summary of the Bulletin of libraries:
"God is dead, but the how men are made, there may still be for thousands of years caves where they show his shadow. " We remember that on several occasions that, in "gay science" and other works, Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche book award. This should not, or not to resume account of the Bulletin of the libraries of France, his assertion. But, as Nietzsche pointed out, it requires in any case clearly, in our civilization, this "religious" that the least we can write is that it feeds, today as yesterday, reasons and Unreason , loves and hatreds, tolerances and intolerances manifest infinite.
Contents:
Folder "Religion in the library"
Acquire
Access to the spiritual heritage of mankind: politics religion documentary by the National Library of France (Christopher Lee).
Scanning in Religious Studies: A program consultation (Corinne Booker).
Centre European religious anthropology: the "library confessional" as a segment of a scholarly library (Pierre Antoine Fabre and Dominique Julia).
Transmit
Train to the understanding of religious facts (Gautier Auburtin).
Information literacy in theology and religious studies: introduction of a program at the University of Lausanne (Yvan Bourquin).
The Librarian and the priest (Pierre-Jacques Lamblin).
undertake this journey, I am not worthy : Translating the Bible (Frederic Boyer).
Staging the religious: the exhibitions in Religious Studies at the National Library and University of Strasbourg (David-Georges Picard and Madeleine Zeller).
Represent
What place for religion in public libraries? News of a debate (Valerie Tesnière).
What role for Islam in French libraries? (Adele Sini).
The French and European networks of religious libraries (Odile Dupont). The network
Rachel: a showcase of Jewish sources (Jean-Claude Kuperminc).
About
CALIS South: Open Access as a springboard for the information culture in Francophone Africa (Joel and Carole Angeloz Bessero).
And still the usual sections: Overviews, Reviews. To subscribe to
BBF: http://bbf.enssib.fr/s-abonner-au-bbf
The issue is available free online at the site of BBF: http://bbf.enssib.fr
"Quisque ubique habitat, Maxime, nusquam habitat" (Martial, Epigrams)
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