![Cataloging](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi85LzkwL0xvY2F0aW9uX29mX1VuaW9uX0NhdGFsb2dfaW5fMTkyN19vbl9zb3J0aW5nX2RlY2tfJTI4ZGVja18yNyUyOV9vZl90aGVfU291dGhlYXN0X3N0YWNrX29mX3RoZV9MaWJyYXJ5X29mX0NvbmdyZXNzLmpwZy8xNjAwcHgtTG9jYXRpb25fb2ZfVW5pb25fQ2F0YWxvZ19pbl8xOTI3X29uX3NvcnRpbmdfZGVja18lMjhkZWNrXzI3JTI5X29mX3RoZV9Tb3V0aGVhc3Rfc3RhY2tfb2ZfdGhlX0xpYnJhcnlfb2ZfQ29uZ3Jlc3MuanBn.jpg )
In library and information science, cataloging (US) or cataloguing (UK) is the process of creating metadata representing information resources, such as books, sound recordings, moving images, etc. Cataloging provides information such as author's names, titles, and subject terms that describe resources, typically through the creation of bibliographic records. The records serve as surrogates for the stored information resources. Since the 1970s these metadata are in machine-readable form and are indexed by information retrieval tools, such as bibliographic databases or search engines. While typically the cataloging process results in the production of library catalogs, it also produces other types of discovery tools for documents and collections.
Bibliographic control provides the philosophical basis of cataloging, defining the rules that sufficiently describe information resources, and enable users to find and select the most appropriate resource. A cataloger is an individual responsible for the processes of description, subject analysis, classification, and authority control of library materials. Catalogers serve as the "foundation of all library service, as they are the ones who organize information in such a way as to make it easily accessible".
Cataloging different kinds of materials
Cataloging is a process made in different kinds of institutions (e.g. libraries, archives and museums) and about different kinds of materials, such as books, pictures, museum objects etc. The literature of library and information science is dominated by library cataloging, but it is important to consider other forms of cataloging. For example, there are special systems for cataloging museum objects that have been developed, e.g., Nomenclature for Museum Cataloging. Also, some formats have been developed in some opposition to library cataloging formats, for example, the common communication format for bibliographical databases. About cataloging different kinds of cultural objects, see O'Keefe and Oldal (2017).
Six functions of bibliographic control
Ronald Hagler identified six functions of bibliographic control.
- "Identifying the existence of all types of information resources as they are made available." The existence and identity of an information resource must be known before it can be found.
- "Identifying the works contained within those information resources or as parts of them." Depending on the level of granularity required, multiple works may be contained in a single package, or one work may span multiple packages. For example, is a single photo considered an information resource? Or can a collection of photos be considered an information resource?
- "Systematically pulling together these information resources into collections in libraries, archives, museums, and Internet communication files, and other such depositories." Essentially, acquiring these items into collections so that they can be of use to the user.
- "Producing lists of these information resources prepared according to standard rules for citation." Examples of such retrieval aids include library catalogs, indexes, archival finding aids, etc.
- "Providing name, title, subject, and other useful access to these information resources." Ideally, there should be many ways to find an item so there should be multiple access points. There must be enough metadata in the surrogate record so users can successfully find the information resource they are looking for. These access points should be consistent, which can be achieved through authority control.
- "Providing the means of locating each information resource or a copy of it." In libraries, the online public access catalog (OPAC) can give the user location information (a call number for example) and indicate whether the item is available.
History of bibliographic control
While the organization of information has been going on since antiquity, bibliographic control as we know it today is a more recent invention. Ancient civilizations recorded lists of books onto tablets and libraries in the Middle Ages kept records of their holdings. With the invention of the printing press in the 15th century, multiple copies of a single book could be produced quickly. Johann Tritheim, a German librarian, was the first to create a bibliography in chronological order with an alphabetical author index. Conrad Gessner followed in his footsteps in the next century as he published an author bibliography and subject index. He added to his bibliography an alphabetical list of authors with inverted names, which was a new practice. He also included references to variant spellings of author's names, a precursor to authority control. Andrew Maunsell further revolutionized bibliographic control by suggesting that a book should be findable based on the author's last name, the subject of the book, and the translator. In the 17th century Sir Thomas Bodley was interested in a catalog arranged alphabetically by author's last name as well as subject entries. Sir Robert Cotton's library catalogued books with busts of famous Romans. The busts were organized by their name, i.e. N for Nero, and then came the shelf with its assigned letter, and then the roman numeral of the title's number. For example, the cataloging for The Lindisfarne Gospels reads Nero D IV. Cotton's cataloging method is still in use for his collection in the British Library. In 1697, called for subject arrangement that was subdivided by both chronology and by size (whereas in the past titles were arranged by their size only), as well as an index of subjects and authors by last name and for word order in titles to be preserved based on the title page.
After the French Revolution, France's government was the first to put out a national code containing instructions for cataloging library collections. At the British Museum Library Anthony Panizzi created his "Ninety-One Cataloging Rules" (1841), which essentially served as the basis for cataloging rules of the 19th and 20th centuries. Charles C. Jewett applied Panizzi's "91 Rules" at the Smithsonian Institution.
Types of cataloging
Descriptive cataloging
"Descriptive cataloging" is a well-established concept in the tradition of library cataloging in which a distinction is made between descriptive cataloging and subject cataloging, each applying a set of standards, different qualifications and often also different kinds of professionals. In the tradition of documentation and information science (e.g., by commercial bibliographical databases) the concept document representation (also as verb: document representing) have mostly been used to cover both "descriptive" and "subject" representation. Descriptive cataloging has been defined as "the part of cataloging concerned with describing the physical details of a book, such as the form and choice of entries and the title page transcription."
Subject cataloging
Subject cataloging may take the form of classification or (subject) Indexing. subject cataloguing is the process of assigning terms that describe what a bibliographic item is about whereby Cataloguers perform subject analysis for items in their library, most commonly selecting terms from an authorized list of subject headings, otherwise known as a 'controlled vocabulary.Classification involves the assignment of a given document to a class in a classification system (such as Dewey Decimal Classification or the Library of Congress Subject Headings). Indexing is the assignment of characterizing labels to the documents represented in a record.
Classification typically uses a controlled vocabulary, while indexing may use a controlled vocabulary, free terms, or both.
History
![image](https://www.english.nina.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.jpg)
Libraries have made use of catalogs in some form since ancient times. The very earliest evidence of categorization is from a c. 2500 BCE collection of clay tablets marked in cuneiform script from Nippur, an ancient Sumerian city in present-day Iraq, wherein two lists of works of Sumerian literature of various myths, hymns, and laments are listed. As one tablet had 62 titles, and the other 68, with 43 titles common between them, and 25 new titles in the latter, they are thought to comprise a catalog of the same collection at different periods of time.: 3–4
The library of Ashurbanipal in ancient Nineveh is the first library known to have a classification system on clay tablets. They had cuneiform marks on each side of the tablet. The Library of Alexandria is reported to have had at least a partial catalog consisting of a listing by Callimachus of the Greek literature called "Pinakes". There were originally 825 fragments of Callimachus' "Pinakes", but only 25 of them have survived. of the Han dynasty of the 3rd century A.D. had a catalog listing nearly 30,000 items, each item similar in extent of its content to a Western scroll. The first catalogs in the Islamic world, around the 11th century, were lists of books donated to libraries by persons in the community. These lists were ordered by donor, not by bibliographic information, but they provided a record of the library's inventory.
Many early and medieval libraries in Europe were associated with religious institutions and orders, including the Papal library in Rome. The first Vatican Library catalog is from the late 14th century. These catalogs generally used a topical arrangement that reflected the topical arrangement of the books themselves. The Vatican Library published 'rules for the catalog of printed books' in 1939. These rules were then translated to English and published in the United States in 1949. Back in Medieval times, the library of the Sorbonne in Paris had accumulated more than one thousand books, and in 1290 their catalog pioneered the use of the alphabet as an organizing tool.
It was the growth in libraries after the invention of moveable-type printing and the widespread availability of paper that created the necessity for a catalog that organized the library's materials so that they could be found through the catalog rather than "by walking around." By the 17th century libraries became seen as collections of universal knowledge. Two 17th century authors, Gabriel Naudé, in France, and John Dury, in Scotland, both developed theories of systematic organization of libraries. The development of principles and rules that would guide the librarian in the creation of catalogs followed. The history of cataloging begins at this point.
In ancient times in the orient the title was used to identify the work. Since the renaissance the author has been the main source of identification.
Cataloging standards
Cataloging rules have been defined to allow for consistent cataloging of various library materials across several persons of a cataloging team and across time.
Anglo-American cataloging standards
The English-speaking libraries have shared cataloging standards since the early 1800s. The first such standard is attributed to Anthony Panizzi, the Keeper of the Printed Books of the British Museum Library. His 91 rules, published in 1841, formed the basis for cataloging standards for over 150 years.
Subsequent work in the 19th century was done by Charles Coffin Jewett, head of the Smithsonian library, which at the time was positioned to become the national library of the United States. Jewett used stereotype plates to produce the library's catalog in book form, and proposed the sharing of cataloging among libraries. His rules were published in 1853. A disagreement with the head Smithsonian secretary caused Jewett to be dismissed from his position but soon after he accepted a position with the Boston Public Library. He was tasked with purchasing books as well as arranging them. Jewett earned the role of director of the Boston Public Library in 1858; during this time the Index to the Catalogue of a Portion of the Public Library of the City of Boston Arranged in its Lower Hall was published. The article included new cataloging information alongside many of the Smithsonian cataloging rules that Jewett created. His systems became a model for other libraries as he pushed for alphabetical card catalogs.
Jewett was followed by Charles Ammi Cutter, an American librarian whose Rules for a Dictionary Catalog were published in 1876. Cutter championed the concept of "ease of use" for library patrons.
In the 20th century, library cataloging was forced to address new formats for materials, including sound recordings, movies, and photographs. Seymour Lubetzky, once an employee of the Library of Congress and later a professor at UCLA, wrote a critique of the 1949 ALA rules for entry, Cataloging Rules and Principles: A Critique of the ALA Rules for Entry and a Proposed Design for the Revision. Lubetzky's writings revealed the weaknesses in the existing rules, and spoke to the need for preparing a set of standards for a more complete and succinct code. As changes in culture over time would necessitate an ever-increasing/changing list of rules, Lubetzky "helped remedy the situation by advocating the concept of cataloging according to 'basic principles,' in place of a rule for each case that might arise." He was tasked to do extensive studies of the current cataloging rules over the time period from 1946 to 1969. His analyses shaped the subsequent cataloging rules.
The published American and Anglo-American cataloging rules in the 20th century were:
- Anglo-American rules: Catalog Rules: Author and Title Entries. 1908.
- American Library Association rules: A.L.A. Cataloging Rules for Author and Title Entries. 1949.
- Library of Congress rules: Rules for Descriptive Cataloging in the Library of Congress. 1949.
- AACR: Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules. 1967.
- AACR2: Gorman, Michaël; Winkler, Paul Walter; Association, American Library (1978). Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules (2nd ed.). ISBN 978-0-8389-3210-0.
- AACR2-R: Gorman, Michael; Winkler, Paul Walter; Aacr, Joint Steering Committee for Revision of; Association, American Library (1988). Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules (2nd revised ed.). ISBN 978-0-8389-3346-6.
The 21st century brought renewed thinking about library cataloging, in great part based on the increase in the number of digital formats, but also because of a new consciousness of the nature of the "Work" in the bibliographic context, often attributed to the principles developed by Lubetzky. This was also supported by the work of the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions on the Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR), which emphasized the role of the work in the bibliographic context. FRBR created a tiered view of the bibliographic entity from Item, Manifestation, Expression, to Work. Item refers to the physical form of the book. Manifestation refers to the publication. Expression meaning the translation of the book from other languages. Work refers to the content and ideas of the book. This view was incorporated into the cataloging rules subsequent to AACR2-R, known as Resource Description and Access (RDA).
England
The Bodleian Library at Oxford University developed its cataloging code in 1674. The code emphasized authorship, and books by the same author were listed together in the catalog.
We can trace the origins of modern library cataloging practice back to the 1830s and Anthony Panizzi's 91 rules. Panizzi's singular insight was that a large catalog needed consistency in its entries if it was to serve the user. The first major English-language cataloging code was that developed by Sir Anthony Panizzi for the British Museum catalog. Panizzi's 91 rules were approved by the British Museum in 1839, and published in 1841. The British Museum rules were revised up until 1936. The library departments of the British Museum became part of the new British Library in 1973.
Germany and Prussia
The Prussian government set standard rules called Preußische Instruktionen (PI) (Prussian Instructions) for all of its libraries in 1899.
These rules were based on the earlier Breslauer Instructionen of the University Library at Breslau by Karl Franz Otto Dziatzko.
The Prussian Instructions were a standardized system of cataloging rules. Titles in literature are arranged grammatically not mechanically and literature is entered under its title. These were adopted throughout Germany, Prussia and Austria.
After the adoption of the Paris Principles (PP) in 1961, Germany developed the Regeln für die alphabetische Katalogisierung (RAK) in 1976/1977.
The goal of the Paris Principles was to serve as a basis for international standardization in cataloging. Most of the cataloging codes that were developed worldwide since that time have followed the Paris Principles.
Cataloging codes
Cataloging codes prescribe which information about a bibliographic item is included in the entry and how this information is presented for the user; It may also aid to sort the entries in printing (parts of) the catalog.
Currently, most cataloging codes are similar to, or even based on, the International Standard Bibliographic Description (ISBD), a set of rules produced by the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA) to describe a wide range of library materials. These rules organize the bibliographic description of an item in the following eight areas: title and statement of responsibility (author or editor), edition, material specific details (for example, the scale of a map), publication and distribution, physical description (for example, number of pages), series, notes, and standard number (ISBN). There is an initiative called the Bibliographic Framework (Bibframe) that is "an initiative to evolve bibliographic description standards to a linked data model, in order to make bibliographic information more useful both within and outside the library community." The most commonly used cataloging code in the English-speaking world was the Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, 2nd edition (AACR2). AACR2 provides rules for descriptive cataloging only and does not touch upon subject cataloging. AACR2 has been translated into many languages, for use around the world. The German-speaking world uses the Regeln für die alphabetische Katalogisierung (RAK), also based on ISBD. The Library of Congress implemented the transition to RDA from AACR2 in March 2013.
In subject databases such as Chemical Abstracts, MEDLINE and PsycINFO, the Common Communication Format (CCF) is meant to serve as a baseline standard. Different standards prevail in archives and museums, such as CIDOC-CRM. Resource Description and Access (RDA) is a recent attempt to make a standard that crosses the domains of cultural heritage institutions.
Digital formats
Most libraries currently use the MARC standards—first piloted from January 1966 to June 1968 —to encode and transport bibliographic data.
These standards have seen critiques in recent years for being old, unique to the library community, and difficult to work with computationally. The Library of Congress developed BIBFRAME in 2011, an RDA schema for expressing bibliographic data. BIBFRAME was revised and piloted in 2017 by the Library of Congress, but still is not available to the public. It will first be available to vendors to try out, but afterwards there will be a hybrid form of the system (MARC and BIBFRAME) until the data can be fully translated.
Library digital collections often use simpler digital formats to store their metadata. XML-based schemata, particularly Dublin Core and MODS, are typical for bibliographic data about these collections.
Transliteration
Library items that are written in a foreign script are, in some cases, transliterated to the script of the catalog. In the United States and some other countries, catalogers typically use the ALA-LC romanization tables for this work. If this is not done, there would need to be separate catalogs for each script.
Ethical issues
Ferris maintains that catalogers, in using their judgment and specialized viewpoint, uphold the integrity of the catalog and also provide "added value" to the process of bibliographic control, resulting in added findability for a library's user community. This added value also has the power to harm, resulting in the denial of access to information. Mistakes and biases in cataloging records can "stigmatize groups of people with inaccurate or demeaning labels, and create the impression that certain points of view are more normal than others".
Social responsibility in cataloging is the "fair and equitable access to relevant, appropriate, accurate, and uncensored information in a timely manner and free of bias". In order to act ethically and in a socially responsible manner, catalogers should be aware of how their judgments benefit or harm findability. They should be careful to not misuse or misrepresent information through inaccurate or minimal-level cataloging and to not purposely or inadvertently censor information.
Bair states that it is the professional obligation of catalogers to supply thorough, accurate, high-quality surrogate records for databases and that catalogers also have an ethical obligation to "contribute to the fair and equitable access to information." Bair recommends that catalogers "actively participate in the development, reform, and fair application of cataloging rules, standards, and classifications, as well as information-storage and retrieval systems". As stated by Knowlton, access points "should be what a particular type of library patron would be most likely to search under -- regardless of the notion of universal bibliographic control."
A formal code of ethics for catalogers does not exist, and thus catalogers often follow library or departmental policy to resolve conflicts in cataloging. While the American Library Association created a "Code of Ethics", Ferris notes that it has been criticized for being too general to encompass the special skills that set catalogers apart from other library and information professionals. As stated by Tavani, a code of ethics for catalogers can "inspire, guide, educate, and discipline" (as cited in Bair, 2005, p. 22). Bair suggests that an effective code of ethics for catalogers should be aspirational and also "discuss specific conduct and actions in order to serve as a guide in actual situations". Bair has also laid out the beginnings for a formal code of cataloging ethics in "Toward a Code of Ethics for Cataloging."
Criticism
Sanford Berman, former Head Cataloger of the Hennepin County Library in Minnetonka, Minnesota, has been a leading critic of biased headings in the Library of Congress Subject Headings. Berman's 1971 publication Prejudices and Antipathies: A Tract on the LC Subject Heads Concerning People (P&A) has sparked the movement to correct biased subject headings. In P&A, Berman listed 225 headings with proposed alterations, additions, or deletions and cross-references to "more accurately reflect the language used in addressing these topics, to rectify errors of bias, and to better guide librarians and readers to material of interest". Berman is well known for his "care packages," mailings containing clippings and other materials in support of changes to subject headings and against racism, sexism, homophobia, and governmental secrecy, among other areas for concern.
In "Three Decades Since Prejudices and Antipathies: A Study of Changes in the Library of Congress Subject Headings," Knowlton examines ways in which the Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH) has changed by compiling a table of changes described in P&A, followed by the current status of headings in question. Knowlton states that his intent for this table is to "show how many of Berman's proposed changes have been implemented" and "which areas of bias are still prevalent in LCSH." In the discussion of Knowlton's findings, it is revealed that of the 225 headings suggested for change by Berman, only 88 (39%) have been changed exactly or very closely to his suggestions (p. 127). Another 54 (24%) of headings have been changed but only partially resolve Berman's objections, and "(which) may leave other objectionable wording intact or introduce a different shade of bias." 80 (36%) headings were not changed at all according to Berman's suggestions.
Queer theory and cataloging
Building on Berman's critique of cataloging practices, queer theorists in library and information science such as Emily Drabinski, and have written about the implications of creating stable categorizations for gender identities. Utilizing queer theory in conjunction with library classification and cataloging requires perspectives that can present both ethically and politically sound viewpoints that support marginalized persons such as women, people of color, or members of the LGBTQ+ community. This work has resulted in the modification of RDA Rule 9.7, governing how gender is represented in record creation. At the ALA Midwinter meeting in January 2016, the controlled vocabulary for gender in RDA was abolished, allowing catalogers and libraries to describe a person's gender in whatever terms best represent that person.
Cataloging terms
- Main entry or access point generally refers to the first author named on the item. Additional authors are added as "added entries." In cases where no clear author is named, the title of the work is considered the main entry.
- Authority control is a process of using a single, specific term for a person, place, or title to maintain consistency between access points within a catalog. Effective authority control prevents a user from having to search for multiple variations of a title, author, or term.
- Cooperative cataloging refers to an approach in which libraries collaborate in the creation of bibliographic and authority records, establishing cataloging practices and utilizing systems that facilitate the use of shared records.
See also
- Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules – Library cataloging standard
- Archival processing – Surveying, arranging, preserving collections
- Bibliographer – Person who describes and lists books and other publications
- Cataloging in Publication – Basic cataloging data for a work
- Collaborative Cataloging – shared action of a group making bibliographic records available to its participants in order to prevent duplication of bibliographic records (shared cataloging)
- Findability – the ease with which information can be identified when searching for it
- Information architecture – Structural design of shared information
- Information retrieval – Obtaining information resources relevant to an information need
- ISO 690 – ISO standard for bibliographic referencing
- Knowledge organization – Field of study related to Library and Information Science
- Shared Cataloging Program – Digital library founded in 1997 by UC system
- Subject access point – technique for locating relevant materials by their topics
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- Stevenson, Gordon (1993). Wedgeworth, Robert (ed.). World Encyclopedia of Library and Information Services (illustrated ed.). Chicago, USA: American Library Association (ALA). p. 260. ISBN 978-0-83890609-5. LCCN 93-25159. OCLC 1151779136. ark:/13960/t21c9c571 urn:oclc:record:1151779136.
- Chan, Lois Mai (2007). Cataloging and Classification: An Introduction. Hodges, Theodora L. (3rd ed.). Lanham, Maryland, USA: Scarecrow Press, Inc. ISBN 978-0-81085944-9. LCCN 2007018729. OCLC 124031949. ark:/13960/t4wj0pz47.
- Wiegand, Wayne August; Davis, Donald G., eds. (1994). Encyclopedia of Library History. New York, USA: Garland Publishing.
- "Overview of the BIBFRAME 2.0 Model (BIBFRAME - Bibliographic Framework Initiative, Library of Congress)". www.loc.gov. Archived from the original on 2017-12-28. Retrieved 2017-12-29.
- "Statement of International Cataloguing Principles (ICP)" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2018-07-02. Retrieved 2018-07-01.
- Morton, Katharine D. (1986). The MARC Formats: An Overview. American Archivist, 49(1), 22.
- Schudel, Matt. "Henriette Avram, 'Mother of MARC,' Dies". Library of Congress. Archived from the original on March 3, 2013. Retrieved June 22, 2013.
- Miller, Eric; Uche Ogbuji; Victoria Mueller; Kathy MacDougall (21 November 2012). Bibliographic Framework as a Web of Data: Linked Data Model and Supporting Services (PDF) (Report). Library of Congress. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
- Kroeger, Angela (November 2013). "The Road to BIBFRAME: The Evolution of the Idea of Bibliographic Transition into a Post-MARC Future". Cataloging & Classification Quarterly. 51 (8): 873–890. doi:10.1080/01639374.2013.823584. S2CID 62246328.
- Riesenberg, Benjamin (January 20, 2022). "RDA, BIBFRAME, and Modeling Bibliographic Relationships". UW Libraries Semantic Web Blog. Archived from the original on January 21, 2022. Retrieved August 14, 2022.
- "BIBFRAME Frequently Asked Questions (Bibliographic Framework Transition Initiative, Library of Congress)". www.loc.gov. Archived from the original on 2017-07-06. Retrieved 2017-06-24.
- Ferris, Anna M. (2008). "The Ethics and Integrity of Cataloging". Journal of Library Administration. 47 (3–4): 173–190. doi:10.1080/01930820802186514. S2CID 62224188.[permanent dead link ]
- Knowlton, Steven A. (2005). "Three Decades Since Prejudices and Antipathies: A Study of Changes in the Library of Congress Subject Headings" (PDF). Cataloging & Classification Quarterly. 40 (2): 123–145. doi:10.1300/J104v40n02_08. Archived (PDF) from the original on 11 February 2014. Retrieved 31 May 2014.
- RBERQUIST (19 May 2017). "Professional Ethics". Archived from the original on 12 December 2011. Retrieved 17 May 2014.
- Billey, Amber; Drabinski, Emily; Roberto, K. R. (24 April 2014). "What's Gender Got to Do With It? A Critique of RDA Rule 9.7". Cataloging and Classification Quarterly. 52 (4): 412–421. doi:10.1080/01639374.2014.882465. S2CID 62226099.
- Drabinski, E. (2013). Queering the Catalog: Queer Theory and the Politics of Correction. The Library Quarterly, 83(2), 94-111. doi:10.1086/669547
- "RDA Changes through April 2016" (PDF). Library of Congress. Archived (PDF) from the original on 30 October 2016. Retrieved 29 October 2016.
- "Frequently Asked Questions about Cataloging". Cataloging and Acquisitions - Library of Congress. Library of Congress. 2013-07-19. Archived from the original on 2014-09-11. Retrieved 2014-09-16.
Further reading
- Cutter, Charles (1891). Rules for a Printed Dictionary Catalogue (3rd ed.). Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.
- Joudrey, Daniel N.; Taylor, Arlene G.; Miller, David P. (2015). Introduction to Cataloging and Classification (11th ed.). Santa Barbara, CA: Libraries Unlimited/ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-59884-856-4.
- Smalley, J. 1991. “The French Cataloging Code of 1791, a Translation.” Library Quarterly 61 (1): 1–14.
- Svenonius, Elaine, ed. (1989). The Conceptual foundations of descriptive cataloging. San Diego: Academic Press. ISBN 9780126782103.
- Svenonius, Elaine (2009). The intellectual foundation of information organization (1st MIT Press paperback ed.). Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. ISBN 9780262512619.
- Chan, Lois Mai (2007), Cataloging and classification (Third ed.), The Scarecrow Press, Inc., p. 321, ISBN 978-0-8108-5944-9, OL 9558667M, 0810859440
- Weihs, Jean; Lewis, Shirley (1989). Nonbook materials: the organization of integrated collections (3rd ed.). Ottawa: Canadian Library Association. ISBN 978-0888022400.
In library and information science cataloging US or cataloguing UK is the process of creating metadata representing information resources such as books sound recordings moving images etc Cataloging provides information such as author s names titles and subject terms that describe resources typically through the creation of bibliographic records The records serve as surrogates for the stored information resources Since the 1970s these metadata are in machine readable form and are indexed by information retrieval tools such as bibliographic databases or search engines While typically the cataloging process results in the production of library catalogs it also produces other types of discovery tools for documents and collections A handwritten subject card from the National Library of Medicine s old card catalog recalls the pre computer days when information had to be created classified and sorted by hand HMD Prints amp Photos PP059772 7 Bibliographic control provides the philosophical basis of cataloging defining the rules that sufficiently describe information resources and enable users to find and select the most appropriate resource A cataloger is an individual responsible for the processes of description subject analysis classification and authority control of library materials Catalogers serve as the foundation of all library service as they are the ones who organize information in such a way as to make it easily accessible Cataloging different kinds of materialsCataloging is a process made in different kinds of institutions e g libraries archives and museums and about different kinds of materials such as books pictures museum objects etc The literature of library and information science is dominated by library cataloging but it is important to consider other forms of cataloging For example there are special systems for cataloging museum objects that have been developed e g Nomenclature for Museum Cataloging Also some formats have been developed in some opposition to library cataloging formats for example the common communication format for bibliographical databases About cataloging different kinds of cultural objects see O Keefe and Oldal 2017 Six functions of bibliographic controlRonald Hagler identified six functions of bibliographic control Identifying the existence of all types of information resources as they are made available The existence and identity of an information resource must be known before it can be found Identifying the works contained within those information resources or as parts of them Depending on the level of granularity required multiple works may be contained in a single package or one work may span multiple packages For example is a single photo considered an information resource Or can a collection of photos be considered an information resource Systematically pulling together these information resources into collections in libraries archives museums and Internet communication files and other such depositories Essentially acquiring these items into collections so that they can be of use to the user Producing lists of these information resources prepared according to standard rules for citation Examples of such retrieval aids include library catalogs indexes archival finding aids etc Providing name title subject and other useful access to these information resources Ideally there should be many ways to find an item so there should be multiple access points There must be enough metadata in the surrogate record so users can successfully find the information resource they are looking for These access points should be consistent which can be achieved through authority control Providing the means of locating each information resource or a copy of it In libraries the online public access catalog OPAC can give the user location information a call number for example and indicate whether the item is available History of bibliographic controlWhile the organization of information has been going on since antiquity bibliographic control as we know it today is a more recent invention Ancient civilizations recorded lists of books onto tablets and libraries in the Middle Ages kept records of their holdings With the invention of the printing press in the 15th century multiple copies of a single book could be produced quickly Johann Tritheim a German librarian was the first to create a bibliography in chronological order with an alphabetical author index Conrad Gessner followed in his footsteps in the next century as he published an author bibliography and subject index He added to his bibliography an alphabetical list of authors with inverted names which was a new practice He also included references to variant spellings of author s names a precursor to authority control Andrew Maunsell further revolutionized bibliographic control by suggesting that a book should be findable based on the author s last name the subject of the book and the translator In the 17th century Sir Thomas Bodley was interested in a catalog arranged alphabetically by author s last name as well as subject entries Sir Robert Cotton s library catalogued books with busts of famous Romans The busts were organized by their name i e N for Nero and then came the shelf with its assigned letter and then the roman numeral of the title s number For example the cataloging for The Lindisfarne Gospels reads Nero D IV Cotton s cataloging method is still in use for his collection in the British Library In 1697 called for subject arrangement that was subdivided by both chronology and by size whereas in the past titles were arranged by their size only as well as an index of subjects and authors by last name and for word order in titles to be preserved based on the title page After the French Revolution France s government was the first to put out a national code containing instructions for cataloging library collections At the British Museum Library Anthony Panizzi created his Ninety One Cataloging Rules 1841 which essentially served as the basis for cataloging rules of the 19th and 20th centuries Charles C Jewett applied Panizzi s 91 Rules at the Smithsonian Institution Types of catalogingDescriptive cataloging Descriptive cataloging is a well established concept in the tradition of library cataloging in which a distinction is made between descriptive cataloging and subject cataloging each applying a set of standards different qualifications and often also different kinds of professionals In the tradition of documentation and information science e g by commercial bibliographical databases the concept document representation also as verb document representing have mostly been used to cover both descriptive and subject representation Descriptive cataloging has been defined as the part of cataloging concerned with describing the physical details of a book such as the form and choice of entries and the title page transcription Subject cataloging Subject cataloging may take the form of classification or subject Indexing subject cataloguing is the process of assigning terms that describe what a bibliographic item is about whereby Cataloguers perform subject analysis for items in their library most commonly selecting terms from an authorized list of subject headings otherwise known as a controlled vocabulary Classification involves the assignment of a given document to a class in a classification system such as Dewey Decimal Classification or the Library of Congress Subject Headings Indexing is the assignment of characterizing labels to the documents represented in a record Classification typically uses a controlled vocabulary while indexing may use a controlled vocabulary free terms or both HistoryWorkers creating a union catalog for Slavic publications at the Library of Congress in 1927 Libraries have made use of catalogs in some form since ancient times The very earliest evidence of categorization is from a c 2500 BCE collection of clay tablets marked in cuneiform script from Nippur an ancient Sumerian city in present day Iraq wherein two lists of works of Sumerian literature of various myths hymns and laments are listed As one tablet had 62 titles and the other 68 with 43 titles common between them and 25 new titles in the latter they are thought to comprise a catalog of the same collection at different periods of time 3 4 The library of Ashurbanipal in ancient Nineveh is the first library known to have a classification system on clay tablets They had cuneiform marks on each side of the tablet The Library of Alexandria is reported to have had at least a partial catalog consisting of a listing by Callimachus of the Greek literature called Pinakes There were originally 825 fragments of Callimachus Pinakes but only 25 of them have survived of the Han dynasty of the 3rd century A D had a catalog listing nearly 30 000 items each item similar in extent of its content to a Western scroll The first catalogs in the Islamic world around the 11th century were lists of books donated to libraries by persons in the community These lists were ordered by donor not by bibliographic information but they provided a record of the library s inventory Many early and medieval libraries in Europe were associated with religious institutions and orders including the Papal library in Rome The first Vatican Library catalog is from the late 14th century These catalogs generally used a topical arrangement that reflected the topical arrangement of the books themselves The Vatican Library published rules for the catalog of printed books in 1939 These rules were then translated to English and published in the United States in 1949 Back in Medieval times the library of the Sorbonne in Paris had accumulated more than one thousand books and in 1290 their catalog pioneered the use of the alphabet as an organizing tool It was the growth in libraries after the invention of moveable type printing and the widespread availability of paper that created the necessity for a catalog that organized the library s materials so that they could be found through the catalog rather than by walking around By the 17th century libraries became seen as collections of universal knowledge Two 17th century authors Gabriel Naude in France and John Dury in Scotland both developed theories of systematic organization of libraries The development of principles and rules that would guide the librarian in the creation of catalogs followed The history of cataloging begins at this point In ancient times in the orient the title was used to identify the work Since the renaissance the author has been the main source of identification Cataloging standardsCataloging rules have been defined to allow for consistent cataloging of various library materials across several persons of a cataloging team and across time Anglo American cataloging standards The English speaking libraries have shared cataloging standards since the early 1800s The first such standard is attributed to Anthony Panizzi the Keeper of the Printed Books of the British Museum Library His 91 rules published in 1841 formed the basis for cataloging standards for over 150 years Subsequent work in the 19th century was done by Charles Coffin Jewett head of the Smithsonian library which at the time was positioned to become the national library of the United States Jewett used stereotype plates to produce the library s catalog in book form and proposed the sharing of cataloging among libraries His rules were published in 1853 A disagreement with the head Smithsonian secretary caused Jewett to be dismissed from his position but soon after he accepted a position with the Boston Public Library He was tasked with purchasing books as well as arranging them Jewett earned the role of director of the Boston Public Library in 1858 during this time the Index to the Catalogue of a Portion of the Public Library of the City of Boston Arranged in its Lower Hall was published The article included new cataloging information alongside many of the Smithsonian cataloging rules that Jewett created His systems became a model for other libraries as he pushed for alphabetical card catalogs Jewett was followed by Charles Ammi Cutter an American librarian whose Rules for a Dictionary Catalog were published in 1876 Cutter championed the concept of ease of use for library patrons In the 20th century library cataloging was forced to address new formats for materials including sound recordings movies and photographs Seymour Lubetzky once an employee of the Library of Congress and later a professor at UCLA wrote a critique of the 1949 ALA rules for entry Cataloging Rules and Principles A Critique of the ALA Rules for Entry and a Proposed Design for the Revision Lubetzky s writings revealed the weaknesses in the existing rules and spoke to the need for preparing a set of standards for a more complete and succinct code As changes in culture over time would necessitate an ever increasing changing list of rules Lubetzky helped remedy the situation by advocating the concept of cataloging according to basic principles in place of a rule for each case that might arise He was tasked to do extensive studies of the current cataloging rules over the time period from 1946 to 1969 His analyses shaped the subsequent cataloging rules The published American and Anglo American cataloging rules in the 20th century were Anglo American rules Catalog Rules Author and Title Entries 1908 American Library Association rules A L A Cataloging Rules for Author and Title Entries 1949 Library of Congress rules Rules for Descriptive Cataloging in the Library of Congress 1949 AACR Anglo American Cataloguing Rules 1967 AACR2 Gorman Michael Winkler Paul Walter Association American Library 1978 Anglo American Cataloguing Rules 2nd ed ISBN 978 0 8389 3210 0 AACR2 R Gorman Michael Winkler Paul Walter Aacr Joint Steering Committee for Revision of Association American Library 1988 Anglo American Cataloguing Rules 2nd revised ed ISBN 978 0 8389 3346 6 The 21st century brought renewed thinking about library cataloging in great part based on the increase in the number of digital formats but also because of a new consciousness of the nature of the Work in the bibliographic context often attributed to the principles developed by Lubetzky This was also supported by the work of the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions on the Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records FRBR which emphasized the role of the work in the bibliographic context FRBR created a tiered view of the bibliographic entity from Item Manifestation Expression to Work Item refers to the physical form of the book Manifestation refers to the publication Expression meaning the translation of the book from other languages Work refers to the content and ideas of the book This view was incorporated into the cataloging rules subsequent to AACR2 R known as Resource Description and Access RDA England The Bodleian Library at Oxford University developed its cataloging code in 1674 The code emphasized authorship and books by the same author were listed together in the catalog We can trace the origins of modern library cataloging practice back to the 1830s and Anthony Panizzi s 91 rules Panizzi s singular insight was that a large catalog needed consistency in its entries if it was to serve the user The first major English language cataloging code was that developed by Sir Anthony Panizzi for the British Museum catalog Panizzi s 91 rules were approved by the British Museum in 1839 and published in 1841 The British Museum rules were revised up until 1936 The library departments of the British Museum became part of the new British Library in 1973 Germany and Prussia The Prussian government set standard rules called Preussische Instruktionen PI Prussian Instructions for all of its libraries in 1899 These rules were based on the earlier Breslauer Instructionen of the University Library at Breslau by Karl Franz Otto Dziatzko The Prussian Instructions were a standardized system of cataloging rules Titles in literature are arranged grammatically not mechanically and literature is entered under its title These were adopted throughout Germany Prussia and Austria After the adoption of the Paris Principles PP in 1961 Germany developed the Regeln fur die alphabetische Katalogisierung RAK in 1976 1977 The goal of the Paris Principles was to serve as a basis for international standardization in cataloging Most of the cataloging codes that were developed worldwide since that time have followed the Paris Principles Cataloging codes Cataloging codes prescribe which information about a bibliographic item is included in the entry and how this information is presented for the user It may also aid to sort the entries in printing parts of the catalog Currently most cataloging codes are similar to or even based on the International Standard Bibliographic Description ISBD a set of rules produced by the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions IFLA to describe a wide range of library materials These rules organize the bibliographic description of an item in the following eight areas title and statement of responsibility author or editor edition material specific details for example the scale of a map publication and distribution physical description for example number of pages series notes and standard number ISBN There is an initiative called the Bibliographic Framework Bibframe that is an initiative to evolve bibliographic description standards to a linked data model in order to make bibliographic information more useful both within and outside the library community The most commonly used cataloging code in the English speaking world was the Anglo American Cataloguing Rules 2nd edition AACR2 AACR2 provides rules for descriptive cataloging only and does not touch upon subject cataloging AACR2 has been translated into many languages for use around the world The German speaking world uses the Regeln fur die alphabetische Katalogisierung RAK also based on ISBD The Library of Congress implemented the transition to RDA from AACR2 in March 2013 In subject databases such as Chemical Abstracts MEDLINE and PsycINFO the Common Communication Format CCF is meant to serve as a baseline standard Different standards prevail in archives and museums such as CIDOC CRM Resource Description and Access RDA is a recent attempt to make a standard that crosses the domains of cultural heritage institutions Digital formats Most libraries currently use the MARC standards first piloted from January 1966 to June 1968 to encode and transport bibliographic data These standards have seen critiques in recent years for being old unique to the library community and difficult to work with computationally The Library of Congress developed BIBFRAME in 2011 an RDA schema for expressing bibliographic data BIBFRAME was revised and piloted in 2017 by the Library of Congress but still is not available to the public It will first be available to vendors to try out but afterwards there will be a hybrid form of the system MARC and BIBFRAME until the data can be fully translated Library digital collections often use simpler digital formats to store their metadata XML based schemata particularly Dublin Core and MODS are typical for bibliographic data about these collections Transliteration Library items that are written in a foreign script are in some cases transliterated to the script of the catalog In the United States and some other countries catalogers typically use the ALA LC romanization tables for this work If this is not done there would need to be separate catalogs for each script Ethical issuesFerris maintains that catalogers in using their judgment and specialized viewpoint uphold the integrity of the catalog and also provide added value to the process of bibliographic control resulting in added findability for a library s user community This added value also has the power to harm resulting in the denial of access to information Mistakes and biases in cataloging records can stigmatize groups of people with inaccurate or demeaning labels and create the impression that certain points of view are more normal than others Social responsibility in cataloging is the fair and equitable access to relevant appropriate accurate and uncensored information in a timely manner and free of bias In order to act ethically and in a socially responsible manner catalogers should be aware of how their judgments benefit or harm findability They should be careful to not misuse or misrepresent information through inaccurate or minimal level cataloging and to not purposely or inadvertently censor information Bair states that it is the professional obligation of catalogers to supply thorough accurate high quality surrogate records for databases and that catalogers also have an ethical obligation to contribute to the fair and equitable access to information Bair recommends that catalogers actively participate in the development reform and fair application of cataloging rules standards and classifications as well as information storage and retrieval systems As stated by Knowlton access points should be what a particular type of library patron would be most likely to search under regardless of the notion of universal bibliographic control A formal code of ethics for catalogers does not exist and thus catalogers often follow library or departmental policy to resolve conflicts in cataloging While the American Library Association created a Code of Ethics Ferris notes that it has been criticized for being too general to encompass the special skills that set catalogers apart from other library and information professionals As stated by Tavani a code of ethics for catalogers can inspire guide educate and discipline as cited in Bair 2005 p 22 Bair suggests that an effective code of ethics for catalogers should be aspirational and also discuss specific conduct and actions in order to serve as a guide in actual situations Bair has also laid out the beginnings for a formal code of cataloging ethics in Toward a Code of Ethics for Cataloging CriticismSanford Berman former Head Cataloger of the Hennepin County Library in Minnetonka Minnesota has been a leading critic of biased headings in the Library of Congress Subject Headings Berman s 1971 publication Prejudices and Antipathies A Tract on the LC Subject Heads Concerning People P amp A has sparked the movement to correct biased subject headings In P amp A Berman listed 225 headings with proposed alterations additions or deletions and cross references to more accurately reflect the language used in addressing these topics to rectify errors of bias and to better guide librarians and readers to material of interest Berman is well known for his care packages mailings containing clippings and other materials in support of changes to subject headings and against racism sexism homophobia and governmental secrecy among other areas for concern In Three Decades Since Prejudices and Antipathies A Study of Changes in the Library of Congress Subject Headings Knowlton examines ways in which the Library of Congress Subject Headings LCSH has changed by compiling a table of changes described in P amp A followed by the current status of headings in question Knowlton states that his intent for this table is to show how many of Berman s proposed changes have been implemented and which areas of bias are still prevalent in LCSH In the discussion of Knowlton s findings it is revealed that of the 225 headings suggested for change by Berman only 88 39 have been changed exactly or very closely to his suggestions p 127 Another 54 24 of headings have been changed but only partially resolve Berman s objections and which may leave other objectionable wording intact or introduce a different shade of bias 80 36 headings were not changed at all according to Berman s suggestions Queer theory and cataloging Building on Berman s critique of cataloging practices queer theorists in library and information science such as Emily Drabinski and have written about the implications of creating stable categorizations for gender identities Utilizing queer theory in conjunction with library classification and cataloging requires perspectives that can present both ethically and politically sound viewpoints that support marginalized persons such as women people of color or members of the LGBTQ community This work has resulted in the modification of RDA Rule 9 7 governing how gender is represented in record creation At the ALA Midwinter meeting in January 2016 the controlled vocabulary for gender in RDA was abolished allowing catalogers and libraries to describe a person s gender in whatever terms best represent that person Cataloging termsMain entry or access point generally refers to the first author named on the item Additional authors are added as added entries In cases where no clear author is named the title of the work is considered the main entry Authority control is a process of using a single specific term for a person place or title to maintain consistency between access points within a catalog Effective authority control prevents a user from having to search for multiple variations of a title author or term Cooperative cataloging refers to an approach in which libraries collaborate in the creation of bibliographic and authority records establishing cataloging practices and utilizing systems that facilitate the use of shared records See alsoAnglo American Cataloguing Rules Library cataloging standard Archival processing Surveying arranging preserving collections Bibliographer Person who describes and lists books and other publications Cataloging in Publication Basic cataloging data for a work Collaborative Cataloging shared action of a group making bibliographic records available to its participants in order to prevent duplication of bibliographic recordsPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback shared cataloging Findability the ease with which information can be identified when searching for itPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Information architecture Structural design of shared information Information retrieval Obtaining information resources relevant to an information need ISO 690 ISO standard for bibliographic referencing Knowledge organization Field of study related to Library and Information Science Shared Cataloging Program Digital library founded in 1997 by UC systemPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Subject access point technique for locating relevant materials by their topicsPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallbackReferencesRead Jane M 2003 Cataloguing without tears managing knowledge in the information society Chandos information professional series 1 publ ed Oxford Chandos ISBN 978 1 84334 043 0 Bair Sheila 13 September 2005 Toward a Code of Ethics for Cataloging Technical Services Quarterly 23 1 13 26 doi 10 1300 J124v23n01 02 S2CID 62641197 Dunn Heather Bourcier Paul 2020 Nomenclature for Museum Cataloging Knowledge Organization 47 2 183 194 doi 10 5771 0943 7444 2020 2 183 S2CID 216266901 Simmons Peter amp Hopkinson Alan eds 1992 CCF B the common communication format for bibliographic information Manual Paris UNESCO O Keefe Elizabeth and Maria Oldal 2017 Cataloging Cultural Objects CCO In Encyclopedia of Library and Information Sciences Fourth Edition Edited by John D McDonald and Michael Levine Clark Boca Raton FL CRC Press vol 2 733 42 Hagler Ronald 1997 The Bibliographic Record and Information Technology 3rd ed Chicago American Library Association Taylor Arlene G amp Daniel N Joudrey 2009 The organization of information 3rd ed Englewood Libraries Unlimited p 5 Taylor and Joudrey p 6 Taylor and Joudrey p 7 Murray Stuart 2009 The library an illustrated history Nicholas A Basbanes American Library Association New York New York ISBN 978 1 60239 706 4 OCLC 277203534 Archived from the original on 2020 04 07 Retrieved 2021 10 23 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Strout Ruth French 1956 The Development of the Catalog and Cataloging Codes The Library Quarterly Information Community Policy 26 4 254 275 doi 10 1086 618341 JSTOR 4304573 S2CID 144623376 ProQuest 1290801991 Smalley Joseph 1991 The French Cataloging Code of 1791 A Translation The Library Quarterly Information Community Policy 61 1 1 14 doi 10 1086 602294 JSTOR 4308539 S2CID 146582764 ProQuest 1290716742 Panizzi s 91 Rules for Standardizing the Cataloguing of Books History of Information www historyofinformation com 25 Aug 2014 Archived from the original on 27 May 2022 Retrieved 26 July 2022 Lehnus DJ 1972 A comparison of Panizzi s 91 rules and the AACR of 1967 PDF IDEALS Illinois Archived PDF from the original on 27 April 2022 Retrieved 26 July 2022 Trustees Glossary Office of Library Development the Oklahoma Department of Libraries 2004 Archived from the original on 12 August 2007 Retrieved 1 June 2014 Berti Monica Costa Virgilio The Ancient Library of Alexandria A Model for Classical Scholarship in the Age of Million Book Libraries PDF Archived from the original PDF on February 22 2022 Retrieved August 14 2022 Lesson 5 Subject cataloguing and authority files why it is important to keep control SCIS scis edublogs org Retrieved 2024 01 11 Lionel Casson 2002 Libraries in the Ancient World New Haven Conn Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300097214 0300097212 retrieved 25 August 2021 Matthew Battles 2003 Library New York W W Norton ISBN 978 0393020298 0393020290 Fred Lerner March 15 2001 The Story of Libraries Continuum Intl Pub Group ISBN 9780826411143 0826411142 Frick Bertha M 30 June 1949 The Vatican Library Rules for the Catalog of Printed Books Book Review College amp Research Libraries 10 3 280 282 doi 10 5860 crl 10 03 280 hdl 2142 36162 Lois Mai Chan September 28 2007 Cataloging and classification Cataloging and Classification ed The Scarecrow Press Inc ISBN 9780810859449 OL 9558667M 0810859440 Mason Moya K Historical Development of Library Catalogues Their Purpose and Organization moyak com Archived from the original on June 28 2018 Retrieved June 27 2018 Knowlton Steven May 1 2007 Criticism of Cataloging Code Reform as Seen in the Pages of Library Resources and Technical Services 1957 66 PDF OpenScholar Princeton Archived PDF from the original on November 7 2021 Retrieved June 29 2018 Lehnus Donald J 1 January 1972 A Comparison of Panizzi s 91 Rules and the AACR of 1967 Ideals Illinois Graduate School of Library and Information Science University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign hdl hdl handle net 2142 3872 Archived from the original on 2 July 2018 Retrieved 6 July 2018 Richard P Smiraglia 2001 The nature of a work Lanham Md Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0810840379 OL 3941953M 0810840375 Barbara B Tillett 2004 What is FRBR Washington D C Library of Congress Cataloging Distribution Service OCLC 54962277 OL 13633726M Tillett Barbara February 2004 What is FRBR A Conceptual Model for the Bibliographic Universe PDF Library of Congress Archived from the original PDF on June 27 2022 Retrieved August 14 2022 Coyle Karen 1 January 2010 Library data in a modern context Library Technology Reports 46 1 5 14 Gale A217938297 ProQuest 202746617 Archived from the original on 6 May 2021 Retrieved 6 May 2021 Panizzi Anthony Rules for the Compilation of the Catalogue Catalogue of Printed Books in the British Museum 1841 v 1 p v ix Early English Language Cataloguing Codes Joint Steering Committee for Development of RDA A Brief History of AACR 1 July 2009 Web 01 July 2017 Stevenson Gordon 1993 Wedgeworth Robert ed World Encyclopedia of Library and Information Services illustrated ed Chicago USA American Library Association ALA p 260 ISBN 978 0 83890609 5 LCCN 93 25159 OCLC 1151779136 ark 13960 t21c9c571 urn oclc record 1151779136 Chan Lois Mai 2007 Cataloging and Classification An Introduction Hodges Theodora L 3rd ed Lanham Maryland USA Scarecrow Press Inc ISBN 978 0 81085944 9 LCCN 2007018729 OCLC 124031949 ark 13960 t4wj0pz47 Wiegand Wayne August Davis Donald G eds 1994 Encyclopedia of Library History New York USA Garland Publishing Overview of the BIBFRAME 2 0 Model BIBFRAME Bibliographic Framework Initiative Library of Congress www loc gov Archived from the original on 2017 12 28 Retrieved 2017 12 29 Statement of International Cataloguing Principles ICP PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2018 07 02 Retrieved 2018 07 01 Morton Katharine D 1986 The MARC Formats An Overview American Archivist 49 1 22 Schudel Matt Henriette Avram Mother of MARC Dies Library of Congress Archived from the original on March 3 2013 Retrieved June 22 2013 Miller Eric Uche Ogbuji Victoria Mueller Kathy MacDougall 21 November 2012 Bibliographic Framework as a Web of Data Linked Data Model and Supporting Services PDF Report Library of Congress Retrieved 28 May 2014 Kroeger Angela November 2013 The Road to BIBFRAME The Evolution of the Idea of Bibliographic Transition into a Post MARC Future Cataloging amp Classification Quarterly 51 8 873 890 doi 10 1080 01639374 2013 823584 S2CID 62246328 Riesenberg Benjamin January 20 2022 RDA BIBFRAME and Modeling Bibliographic Relationships UW Libraries Semantic Web Blog Archived from the original on January 21 2022 Retrieved August 14 2022 BIBFRAME Frequently Asked Questions Bibliographic Framework Transition Initiative Library of Congress www loc gov Archived from the original on 2017 07 06 Retrieved 2017 06 24 Ferris Anna M 2008 The Ethics and Integrity of Cataloging Journal of Library Administration 47 3 4 173 190 doi 10 1080 01930820802186514 S2CID 62224188 permanent dead link Knowlton Steven A 2005 Three Decades Since Prejudices and Antipathies A Study of Changes in the Library of Congress Subject Headings PDF Cataloging amp Classification Quarterly 40 2 123 145 doi 10 1300 J104v40n02 08 Archived PDF from the original on 11 February 2014 Retrieved 31 May 2014 RBERQUIST 19 May 2017 Professional Ethics Archived from the original on 12 December 2011 Retrieved 17 May 2014 Billey Amber Drabinski Emily Roberto K R 24 April 2014 What s Gender Got to Do With It A Critique of RDA Rule 9 7 Cataloging and Classification Quarterly 52 4 412 421 doi 10 1080 01639374 2014 882465 S2CID 62226099 Drabinski E 2013 Queering the Catalog Queer Theory and the Politics of Correction The Library Quarterly 83 2 94 111 doi 10 1086 669547 RDA Changes through April 2016 PDF Library of Congress Archived PDF from the original on 30 October 2016 Retrieved 29 October 2016 Frequently Asked Questions about Cataloging Cataloging and Acquisitions Library of Congress Library of Congress 2013 07 19 Archived from the original on 2014 09 11 Retrieved 2014 09 16 Further readingLibrary resources about Cataloging library science Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Cutter Charles 1891 Rules for a Printed Dictionary Catalogue 3rd ed Washington D C Government Printing Office Joudrey Daniel N Taylor Arlene G Miller David P 2015 Introduction to Cataloging and Classification 11th ed Santa Barbara CA Libraries Unlimited ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 856 4 Smalley J 1991 The French Cataloging Code of 1791 a Translation Library Quarterly 61 1 1 14 Svenonius Elaine ed 1989 The Conceptual foundations of descriptive cataloging San Diego Academic Press ISBN 9780126782103 Svenonius Elaine 2009 The intellectual foundation of information organization 1st MIT Press paperback ed Cambridge Mass MIT Press ISBN 9780262512619 Chan Lois Mai 2007 Cataloging and classification Third ed The Scarecrow Press Inc p 321 ISBN 978 0 8108 5944 9 OL 9558667M 0810859440 Weihs Jean Lewis Shirley 1989 Nonbook materials the organization of integrated collections 3rd ed Ottawa Canadian Library Association ISBN 978 0888022400