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May 18th 2008 | Complete Hours
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Quick links to Frequently Used Resources in the East Asian Collection:East Asian Studies materials written in English or in European languages are shelved in the regular collection, unless they are reference materials written in English. Current and bound periodicals are interfiled with the regular collection. Very rare materials, such as those in the Lyman Collection, are housed in Special Collections. The Japanese books in the Lyman Collection are now being added to the online catalog. You can track the progress by searching for Lyman as an author, or clicking here:Lyman Benjamin Smith 1835 1920. Materials relating to the founding of Hokkaido University and William S. Clark are found in the Archives.
Finding Materials in the LibraryUsing the online catalog is a good way to begin searching for East Asian language materials because you can search by either the romanized form of the word or using East Asian scripts. The system is set up to display in Unicode and you can use the Chinese Japanese or Korean language keyboards installed on all public machinese (look for the EN) to type. 70% of the collection has been entered in the online library catalog, but if you cannot find something, please come in and check the card catalog as well. The card catalog is located in the East Asian Reference Room on the 22nd floor.Whether you use the online catalog or the old card catalog to search for materials written in East Asian languages, it is important that you use the correct romanization scheme. The Collection follows Library of Congress rules for cataloging and classification.
Recent Notable Acquisitions East Asian Collection StaffCurrently located in room 249/2258, off the East Asian Reference Room, East Asian staff members are available and eager to provide assistance to users of the East Asian collection. Please do not hesitate to contact us for help finding/requesting materials in Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. We can also provide guidance on searching the Internet for research in those languages.
- Chinese - use Pinyin, not Wade-Giles (please note that the card catalog uses Wade-Giles)
- e.g. Beijing, Mao Zedong not Pei-ching or Mao Tse-tung
- Japanese - use Modified Hepburn, not Kunreishiki
- e.g. Tsukamoto not Tukamoto
- Korean - use McCune-Reishauer not the new Korean Government system
- e.g. Hangugo not Hangeugeo
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