Description
About the Author
Colin B. Burke is an historian who has researched and published on the history of higher education, quantitative methods in history, American political history, the history of computers, the history of information, the history of nonprofit organizations, and intelligence history. Among his honors, he has been the Eugene Garfield Fellow at the Chemical Heritage Foundation, a Research Fellow at the Yale PONPO Center, the Scholar in Residence at the National Security Agency, a Fellow of the Social Science Research Council, and the Fulbright Scholar in Warsaw during the year when Poland ousted the Communists.
Reviews
A story untold until now. Before the age of Google and Wikipedia, finding the right piece of information was no simple matter. The process was especially crucial for the Allies during the Second World War. This thoroughly researched book traces the fascinating but tortuous process of gathering and indexing information, from its World War II roots to civilian applications, up to the computer age. -- Paul E. Ceruzzi, curator, Aerospace Computing and Electronics, National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution
At last, a well-researched account of key information retrieval developments following World War II. In America's Information Wars, names mentioned in the technical literature become human beings, innovations are set in social contexts, some exaggerated claims exposed, and a framework provided for us to build on. -- Michael Buckland, emeritus professor, School of Information, University of California, Berkeley
There is no one better positioned to untangle the labyrinth of the early intersection of science and intelligence information than Colin Burke. His fascinating account reveals so many of the characters that participated in this arcane discipline. He pulls at the threads of the tangled web to tease out the characters and their participation in bringing together science, information, and intelligence. -- Thomas R. Johnson, author of American Cryptology During the Cold War,1945-1989
The role of library and information science in the creation of modern computing is not a well-known story. The role of the intelligence community in creating technologies and information services that stood at the forefront of information science is even less well known. This book, based in solid archival research, remedies these gaps in our understanding. People interested in modern computer and information science will find this an engaging story that broadens their understanding of how these important fields in the modern world came about. -- William Aspray, professor, Information Science, University of Colorado Boulder
Too often, looking back, we see the 'tip of the iceberg' of historical achievement. Colin Burke's unique contribution to our understanding of information science and computer science provides details that enable us to see dead ends as well as successes. -- Jonathan Grudin, principal researcher, Microsoft and affiliate professor, University of Washington
Awards
Winner of ASIST Best Information Science Book of the Year 2018.
Book Information
ISBN 9781538112458
Author Colin B. Burke
Format Hardback
Page Count 390
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield