In 1951 Suzanne Briet wrote, with minimal explanation, that an antelope could become a document. In 1948 Robert Pagès (1919-2007) published an explanation of the same and related ideas. Textual and other graphic documents are about something, hence descriptive and derived. Animals and other objects are informative because they are illustrative of themselves either as specimens of a class (tokens of a type) or simply as particular individuals (“autodocuments”). Pagès’ career and ideas are briefly discussed
This paper discusses the concept of the document evolved throughout the 20th century in France, part...
This article is a translation of one originally published in 1948 in Review of Documentation. The ar...
Reference in modern documentation is largely governed by theories of evidential representation by do...
In 1951 Suzanne Briet wrote, with minimal explanation, that an antelope could become a document. In ...
Ishi, the “last wild Indian in North America,” was “discovered” in 1911 and spent the last years of ...
There is ambiguity in the use of the term bibliography for both the study of printed books and also ...
The article elaborates on the informational relationship between nature, animals and humans. In trad...
Robert Pagès (1919-2007) was an anarchist activist who later became director of a major social psych...
The Francophone school of the document specify the important role of the user to qualified an object...
This paper discusses beings and their rights in terms of philosophical and documentation ontology. I...
The function of the library is to collect, preserve, and provide access to recorded human communicat...
The concept of document is common and fundamental to numerous information-related disciplines. Perha...
Writing, printing, telecommunications, and copying enabled the rise of the “information society” (mo...
This collection of papers on aspects of documentation theory and practice celebrates the ten‐year an...
During her thirty years at the Biblioth??que Nationale (BN), Suzanne Briet (1894???1989) made impor...
This paper discusses the concept of the document evolved throughout the 20th century in France, part...
This article is a translation of one originally published in 1948 in Review of Documentation. The ar...
Reference in modern documentation is largely governed by theories of evidential representation by do...
In 1951 Suzanne Briet wrote, with minimal explanation, that an antelope could become a document. In ...
Ishi, the “last wild Indian in North America,” was “discovered” in 1911 and spent the last years of ...
There is ambiguity in the use of the term bibliography for both the study of printed books and also ...
The article elaborates on the informational relationship between nature, animals and humans. In trad...
Robert Pagès (1919-2007) was an anarchist activist who later became director of a major social psych...
The Francophone school of the document specify the important role of the user to qualified an object...
This paper discusses beings and their rights in terms of philosophical and documentation ontology. I...
The function of the library is to collect, preserve, and provide access to recorded human communicat...
The concept of document is common and fundamental to numerous information-related disciplines. Perha...
Writing, printing, telecommunications, and copying enabled the rise of the “information society” (mo...
This collection of papers on aspects of documentation theory and practice celebrates the ten‐year an...
During her thirty years at the Biblioth??que Nationale (BN), Suzanne Briet (1894???1989) made impor...
This paper discusses the concept of the document evolved throughout the 20th century in France, part...
This article is a translation of one originally published in 1948 in Review of Documentation. The ar...
Reference in modern documentation is largely governed by theories of evidential representation by do...