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The Librarian The Librarian
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The Library The Library
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The Collections The Collections
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1 The Librarian, the Library, and the Russian Collections
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Published:June 2024
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Abstract
This chapter discusses three factors, specific to the Library of Congress, which are important in explaining why and how the Library interacted so intensively with Russia after 1987. The first was James H. Billington's appointment as Librarian of Congress and his personal commitment to using his post to promote positive change in Russia. As a Russian speaker and scholar of Russian culture respected in both the United States and the Soviet Union for his expertise, Billington was uniquely placed to lead the Library as the executive branch of the US government, the Congress, and US society as a whole engaged with a changing Russia. The second factor was the character of the Library of Congress as a government agency, an arm of the US Congress that was called on to assist in implementing official policy toward Russia, and the extraordinary capabilities, especially Russian-language skills, that the Library developed during the Cold War era and that it could bring to bear to engage with the former adversary. The third was the Russian collections that the Library had built up over nearly a century and that provided the main (although not the only) basis for the Library's extensive engagement with Russia.
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