To prepare library and information science (LIS) students to be successful cataloging practitioners in this changing landscape, this book provides a solid understanding of fundamental cataloging concepts, standards, and practices: their history, where they stand, and possibilities for the future.
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.
Part 1: Fundamental Concepts in Cataloging
1. The Bibliographic Work:
History, Theory, and Practice
2. Cataloging Principles and Objectives:
History and Development
3. Authority Control Today: Principles, Practices,
and Trends
4. Aboutness and Conceptual Analysis: A Review
5. Controlled
Vocabularies: Past, Present and Future of Subject Access
6. Library
Classification Systems in the U.S.: Basic Ideas and Examples Part 2:
Fundamental Cataloging Standards and Practices
7. Descriptive Cataloging: The
History and Practice of Describing Library Resources
8. Corporate Bodies:
Access Points and Authority Control
9. Authority Control of Arabic Personal
Names: RDA and Beyond
10. Records, Responsibility, and Power: An Overview of
Cataloging Ethics
11. Cataloging Childrens Materials: Issues and Solutions
Gretchen L. Hoffman is Professor in the School of Library and Information Studies at Texas Womans University, Denton, Texas, USA. Her primary teaching and research interests focus on cataloging and classification.
Karen Snow is Professor and the Ph.D. Program Director in the School of Information Studies at Dominican University, River Forest, Illinois, USA. Her primary teaching and research interests focus on cataloging, classification, and metadata.