Cataloging and Classification

Cataloging and Classification
Author: Gretchen L. Hoffman
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2021-11-24
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 1000483606

The cataloging and classification field is changing rapidly. New concepts and models, such as linked data, identity management, the IFLA Library Reference Model, and the latest revision of Resource Description and Access (RDA), have the potential to change how libraries provide access to their collections. To prepare library and information science (LIS) students to be successful cataloging practitioners in this changing landscape, they need a solid understanding of fundamental cataloging concepts, standards, and practices: their history, where they stand currently, and possibilities for the future. The chapters in Cataloging and Classification: Back to Basics are meant to complement textbooks and lectures so students can go deeper into specific topics. New and well-seasoned library practitioners will also benefit from reading these chapters as a way to refresh or fill gaps in their knowledge of cataloging and classification. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of the journal, Cataloging & Classification Quarterly.

FRBR, Before and After

FRBR, Before and After
Author: Karen Coyle
Publisher: American Library Association
Total Pages: 231
Release: 2015-11-14
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 0838913458

Coyle’s expert ability to draw from the deep historical background of cataloging theory to illuminate the potentials of library data on the Web helped win her the 2011 ALCTS Outstanding Publication Award. Here she persuasively argues that to more effectively connect library users with books, movies, music, computer games, and other resources, library data needs to move beyond FRBR towards a more integrative approach to bibliographic models. But doing so requires fundamental changes in the approach to library data. Combing a sweeping perspective with a critical eye, she assesses how we define a work in the bibliographic world. Showing how bibliographic models reflect technology and our assumed goals of libraries, she points the way ahead for catalogers and metadata specialists, providing clear explanations and analysis on such topics as library data models and their connection to technology, from early printing to relational databases and the Semantic Web;ideas and influence of leading thinkers such Lubetsky, Wilson, and Tillet, along with lesser known theorists like Tanaguchi;IFLA meetings that led to the FRBR study group, including its original charge and final report;FRBR as a conceptual model, and how that differs from data models;the FRBR document’s flawed entity-relationship model and how it overlooks user needs;efforts to define a work as a meaningful, creative unit separate from the physical package;detailed analysis of the FRBR entities; andimplementations of FRBR both inside and outside the library community.Coyle's articulate treatment of the issues at hand helps bridge the divide between traditional cataloging practice and the algorithmic metadata approach, making this book an important resource for both LIS students and practitioners.

IFLA Cataloguing Principles: Steps towards an International Cataloguing Code, 5

IFLA Cataloguing Principles: Steps towards an International Cataloguing Code, 5
Author: Barbara B. Tillett
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter
Total Pages: 533
Release: 2008-12-18
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 3598441029

Die International Cataloguing Principles enthalten den aktuellen Stand internationaler Vereinheitlichung von Katalogisierungsregeln für OPACs. Sie ersetzen die Paris Principles von 1961. Die neuen International Cataloguing Principles sind das Ergebnis von Bestandsaufnahmen und Diskussionen der Katalogisierungsarbeiten in den verschiedenen Ländern der Welt durch internationale Experten. Sie bieten einen weltweiten Überblick über die verschiedenen Bibliothekskataloge durch Länderberichte: Band 1: Europa, Band 2: Lateinamerika und Karibik, Band 3: Mittlerer Osten und Nordafrika, Band 4: Asien, Band 5: Südafrika. Band 5 schließt das Werk ab und enthält ein Glossar zu den Regeln.

Theory of Cataloguing, 5th Edition

Theory of Cataloguing, 5th Edition
Author: Kumar Girja & Kumar Krishan
Publisher: Vikas Publishing House
Total Pages: 396
Release: 2009-11
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 0706998162

In this edition detailed information on Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules (Edition 2) has been added for description and access points, giving suitable examples and AACR2 as appeared in 1978 incorporating the International standards. The chapter on “Comparative Study of AACR and CCC” has also revised on the lines of new rules of this new code. Besides these, POPSI, PRECIS and ISBD and chapter on Normative Principles have been elaborated by giving additional examples and comments. The last chapter of the book has been rewritten and renamed as Progress in Library Cataloguing.This book is a special effort to undertake a comparative study of two cataloguing codes: The Anglo American cataloguing rules (1967 and 1978 editions) and Ranganathan’s Classified Catalogue code (1964). An attempt has been made to find out the basic differences and simulations in the approaches of the codes and to discover a synthesis between them. The other special feature of this study is the simplicity in the style of writing.