Adele Kibre

Adele Kibre was an expert in microphotography who participated in the clandestine discovery and filming of European academic documents during World War II at a time when Western libraries were otherwise unable to obtain scientific publications from countries with whom they were at war.

Adele Kibre
Born1898
Philadelphia
NationalityUSA
CitizenshipUSA
Alma materUniversity of California, Berkeley; University of Chicago
OccupationDocument microphotographer
Years active1939-1945
EmployerInterdepartmental Committee for the Acquisition of Foreign Publications (IDC)
RelativesPearl Kibre

Early life and education

Adele Kibre was born in Philadelphia in 1898, and grew up in Los Angeles. Her family was involved in Hollywood life; her parents designed sets and one sister was married to a silent film star. [1] Her sister Pearl Kibre was a well-known academic in medieval studies. Adele studied at the University of California, Berkeley and taught Latin there after receiving her master's degree. She later earned a PhD at the University of Chicago. Her dissertation was a study of the text of the Carolingian scholar Smaragdus of Saint-Mihiel's Liber in partibus Donati,[2] and was incorporated, after her death, into a critical edition by Bengt Löfstedt.[3]

Documentation research

She obtained a postdoctoral fellowship to the American Academy of Rome after completing her PhD. She lived for most of the 1930s in Europe, supporting herself by doing research for American academics by photographing materials in European libraries. It was at these European libraries that she was exposed to microfilm technology.[1] In 1939 she met microfilm entrepreneur Eugene Power and acted as his interpreter at the Vatican library.[4] She was recommended by Power to work freelance with the Interdepartmental Committee for the Acquisition of Foreign Publications (IDC), a United States agency which had an office in Stockholm.[4] The role of the agency was to obtain and transmit mostly public documents originating in Europe, in particular from those areas under Axis control. Through this agency Kibre is attributed with sending 182 reels of microfilm to the British Ministry of Information.[5] She also continued to make copies and photograph materials for US faculty and for her own studies, and in 1941 is reported to have journeyed from Europe to the United States with 17 pieces of luggage containing research materials.[1]

Publications

  • Prolegomena to the unpublished text of Smaragdus' commentary on Donatus, De partibus orationis. Thesis, University of Chicago, 1930
  • "Microphotography in European libraries." Journal of Documentary Reproduction 4, no. 3 (1941): 158–163.
gollark: The E-ink ones, with no keyboards and touchscreens.
gollark: Riiiight. The E-ink will definitely work perfectly and all that.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Again, they're basically completely different to androidy ones.
gollark: In many ways.

References

  1. Peiss, Kathy (2019). Information Hunters: When Librarians, Soldiers and Spies Banded Together in World War II Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0190944612.
  2. Kibre, Adele (1930). Prolegomena to the unpublished text of Smaragdus' commentary on Donatus, De partibus orationis (PhD). University of Chicago. OCLC 835587.
  3. Löfstedt, Bengt; Holtz, Louis; Kibre, Adele (1986). Liber in partibus Donati. Turnholti: Typographi Brepols. ISBN 2503036821.
  4. Power, Eugene B. (1990). Edition of one: the autobiography of Eugene B. Power. Ann Arbor, Mi: University Microfilms International. ISBN 978-0835708982.
  5. Richards, Pamela Spence (June 1988). "Great Britain and Allied Scientific Information: 1939-1945". Minerva. 26 (2): 177–198. doi:10.1007/BF01096695. JSTOR 41820723. PMID 11621564.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.