Christiane Gonod Link
"Gonod didn't write bestsellers. She wrote index cards. But every time you use a filter on a shopping site or a database, you are using a small piece of her logic. She taught machines and humans how to agree on where things belong."
Christiane Gonod was a French librarian and curator, best known for her pioneering work with the Universal Decimal Classification (UDC) and her role at the Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF). Since her work is technical and historical, content created about her should focus on , cataloging history , and women in STEM .
"Imagine trying to classify a book called 'The Psychology of Art in the Digital Age.' Dewey struggles. UDC, thanks to Gonod’s advocacy, handles it beautifully. She saw the library as a network, not a list." christiane gonod
Christiane Gonod represents the bridge between the analog card catalog and the semantic web. She reminds us that classification is a political and intellectual act. Option 3: Podcast Script (5 minutes) Title: The Secret Cataloger: Christiane Gonod
Here is a content package designed for different platforms (LinkedIn, blog, podcast, or video script). Focus: Celebrating a hidden figure in information science. "Gonod didn't write bestsellers
At the BnF, Gonod fought to modernize systems that had remained static for centuries. She argued that a library’s job is not just to store books, but to connect concepts —a revolutionary idea that predates hyperlinks by 50 years.
In the pantheon of library science, names like Dewey and Ranganathan dominate. But if you use a library catalog in France, or benefit from structured data online, you owe a debt to Christiane Gonod. She taught machines and humans how to agree
Most people know Melvil Dewey. Few know . She was the driving force behind the modern French cataloging system. As a curator at the BnF, she championed the Universal Decimal Classification (CDU/UDC) , transforming how we retrieve complex information.
