Cutter Expansive Classification: Difference between revisions

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== History ==
[[Charles Ammi Cutter]] (1837–1903), inspired by the decimal classification of his contemporary [[Melvil Dewey]], and with Dewey's initial encouragement, developed his own classification scheme for the [[Winchester, Massachusetts]] town library and then the [[Boston AthenaeumAthenæum]],{{r|n=LaMontagne-1961|p=208}} at which he served as librarian for twenty-four years. He began work on it around the year 1880, publishing an overview of the new system in 1882. The same classification would later be used, but with a different notation, also devised by Cutter, at the [[Cary Memorial Library|Cary Library]] in [[Lexington, Massachusetts]].{{r
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<blockquote>Cutter produced the best classification of the nineteenth century. While his system was less "scientific" than that of [[J. P. Lesley]], its other key features – notation, specificity, and versatility – make it deserving of the praise it has received.{{r|n=LaMontagne-1961|p=215}}</blockquote>
 
Its top level divisions served as a basis for the [[Library of Congress classificationClassification]], which also took over some of its features.{{r|n=LaMontagne-1961|p=226}} It did not catch on as did Dewey's system because Cutter died before it was completely finished, making no provision for the kind of development necessary as the bounds of knowledge expanded and scholarly emphases changed throughout the twentieth century.{{r|n=Winke-2004}}
 
== Structure ==