The Collections and Academic Liaison (CAL) department includes the team of librarians who are the curators of Cambridge University Library’s collections of European-language material. We have sole responsibility for post-1900 titles, and share responsibility for antiquarian material with colleagues in Special Collections. The languages on which the European librarians in CAL focus are those taught by the University – Catalan, Dutch, French, German, Greek, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish and Ukrainian. Material in other European languages is currently acquired in minimal quantities, but the Library holds strong historical collections in many other European languages, and management of these is also part of our remit.
The word “European” in terms of our work refers to the geographical origins of the languages we cover, not to the geographical scope of the countries we represent in our acquisitions. CAL also handle material from all countries where the languages of Europe are spoken – Latin America, the Caribbean, French-speaking Canada, French- and Portuguese-speaking Africa.
In theory, we deal strictly with material in European languages, with responsibility for English-language materials relating to our parts of the world sitting with our counterparts in the English section of CAL. This contrasts with the organisation in many other libraries, where area specialists work on all material relating to their area regardless of language. In practice, however, we do of course take a keen interest and often an active part in the acquisition of English-language material. The idea that our users deal with one set of people if they are interested in books about Russia in Russian, and a different set of people if they are also interested in books about Russia in English, is not a distinction we would ever wish to insist upon. English-language titles will feature regularly in our posts.
The European part of CAL is currently made up of 10 people, some of whom work only part-time. We are from a wide range of nationalities – Argentinian, French, German, Italian, Polish and Spanish as well as British – so we have a wide range of experience and expertise to bring to our roles as book selectors, cataloguers and library curators. Input and advice from our users nevertheless remain critically important in order to ensure that our collections represent current research needs. The door to our office on South Wing 1 is unlocked during normal working hours, and visitors are very welcome.
The blog will also feature posts from other libraries in Cambridge inasmuch as their collecting relates to European languages.
I am writing a blog (in Portuguese), in which I intend to review at least one book from each country of the world and therefore make it more accessible to Brazilian readers. This page has been a great source of inspiration! Thank you for sharing.