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Choice of Access Points and Form of Names

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Title: Choice of Access Points and Form of Names


1
Choice of Access Points and Form of Names
  • University of California, Berkeley
  • School of InformationIS 245 Organization of
    Information In Collections

2
Introduction to Description
  • Description (or descriptive cataloging) is
    concerned with indentification of an item and
    recording information about the item so that it
    may be identified exactly and cannot be confused
    with another item. (From Wynar/Taylor)

3
Structure of AACRII
  • Part I Description
  • Chap 1 General
  • Chap 2 Books, pamphlets and printed sheets
  • Chap 3 Cartographic Materials
  • Chap 4 Manuscripts
  • Chap 5 Music
  • Chap 6 Sound recordings
  • Chap 7 Motion Pictures and videorecordings
  • Chap 8 Graphic Materials
  • Chap 9 Computer Files
  • Chap 10 Three-Dimensional Artefacts and Realia
  • Chap 11 Microforms
  • Chap 12 Serials
  • Chap 13 Analysis

4
Structure of AACRII
  • Part II Headings, Uniform Titles, and References
  • Chap 21 Choice of Access Points
  • Chap 22 Headings for persons
  • Chap 23 Geographic Names
  • Chap 24 Headings for Corporate Bodies
  • Chap 25 Uniform Titles
  • Chap 26 References

5
Organization of the Description
  • Title and statement of responsibility
  • Edition
  • Material specific details
  • Publication, distribution, etc.
  • Physical description
  • Series
  • Notes
  • Standard numbers and terms of availability

6
Choice of Access Points
  • Chapter 21 of AACRII is concerned with how to
    choose the elements of a description that will be
    made searchable AKA Access Points
  • We will look a bit at the sort of rules that are
    used to decide what does and doesnt get made
    searchable in (conventional) paper and online
    catalogs (and why)

7
Choice of Access Points
  • General Rule
  • 21.1A -- Personal authorship -- enter works by
    one or more persons under the heading for
    personal author.
  • 21.1B2 -- Corporate Body -- may be chosen as the
    main entry for an item if it falls into one or
    more of 6 categories.

8
21.1B2 Corporate Author Categories
  • a) The work deals with the body itself, such as a
    financial report or operations report, staff
    listing, or a catalog of the bodys resources.
  • b) Certain legal, governmental, or religious
    types of works listed in the rule
  • laws decrees of the chief executive that have
    force of law administrative regulations
    constitutions court rules treaties, etc. court
    decisions legislative hearings religious laws
    (e.g. canon law) liturgical works

9
21.1B2 Corporate Author Categories
  • c) Those that record the collective thought of
    the body
  • reports of commissions or committees, official
    position statements, etc.
  • d) Those that report the collective activity of a
    conference (e.g. proceedings , collected
    papers), an expedition (e.g. results of
    exploration, investigation), or of an event
    falling within the definition of a corporate body
    -- provided that the conference, etc. is
    prominently named in the item

10
21.1B2 Corporate Author Categories
  • e) Those that result from the collective activity
    of a performing group as a whole where the
    responsibility of the group goes beyond that of
    mere performance, execution, etc.
  • Includes sound recordings, films,
    videorecordings, and written records of
    performances.
  • f) Cartographic materials emanating from a
    corporate body other than a body that is merely
    responsible for their distribution and publication

11
21.1B3
  • If a work falls outside the categories, treat it
    as if no corporate body was involved.
  • Added entries are made for prominently named
    corporate bodies.

12
21.1C Entry Under Title
  • If there is no personal author, personal
    authorship is diffuse, and the work is not
    eligible under 21.1B2, when the work is a
    collection with multiple authorship or produced
    under editorial direction, or when the work is a
    text that a religious group accepts as sacred
    scripture.

13
21.2 21.3
  • Changes in title proper
  • Changes in Person or Body responsible for a work

14
Today
  • Form of Name -- Personal names

15
Headings for Persons
  • Once you decide (via the Chapter 21 rules) that
    entries are to be made for a person or persons,
    you must then choose the form that the name will
    appear in.

16
General Rule
  • Choose, as the basis of the heading for a person,
    the name by which he or she is commonly known.
    This may be a persons real name, pseudonym,
    title of nobility, nickname, initials, or other
    appellation.
  • Treat a roman numeral associate with a given name
    (as, for example, in the case of some popes,
    royalty, and ecclesiastics) as part of the name.
  • For authors using one or more psuedonyms or a
    real name and one or more psuedonyms, see 22.2b

17
Examples
  • Caedmon
  • William Shakespeare
  • D. W. Griffith (not David Wark Griffith)
  • Jimmy Carter (not James Earl Carter)
  • Ouida (not Marie Louise de la Ramee)
  • H.D. (not Hilda Doolittle)

18
22.1B
  • Determine the name by which a person is commonly
    known from the chief sources of information of
    works by that person, issued in his or her
    language. If the person works in a non-verbal
    context (e.g., a painter, a sculptor) or is not
    primarily known as an author, determine the name
    by which he or she is commonly known from
    reference sources issued in his or her language
    or country of residence or activity

19
Titles of Nobility
  • Include any titles of nobility or terms of honour
    or words or phrases that commonly appear in
    association with the name either wholly or in
    part.
  • Sir Richard Acland
  • Duke of Wellington
  • Fra Bartolommeo
  • Baroness Orczy

20
22.2 Choice among different names
  • If a person (other than one using a pseudonym or
    pseudonyms -- see 22.2B) is known by more than
    one name choose the name by which the person is
    clearly most commonly known, if there is one.
    Otherwise choose one name or form of name
    according to the following order of precedence

21
Choice of Name
  • A) the name that appears most frequently in the
    persons works
  • B) the name that appears most frequently in
    reference sources
  • C) the latest name

22
22.2b Pseudonyms
  • If all of the works by one person appear under
    one pseudonym, choose the pseudonym. If the real
    name is known, make a reference from the real
    name to the pseudonym.
  • Yukio Mishima (not Kimitake Hiraoka)
  • George Orwell (not Eric Arthur Blair)
  • Nevil Shute (not Nevil Shute Norway)
  • Woody Allen (not Allen Stewart Konigsberg)

23
22.2B2 - Separate Bibliographic Identities
  • If a person has established two or more
    bibliographic identities, as indicated by the
    fact that works of one type appear under one
    pseudonym and works of another type appear under
    other pseudonyms or the persons real name,
    choose as the basis for the heading for each
    group of works, the name by which works in that
    group are identified. Make references to connect
    the names...

24
Examples
  • J.I.M. Stewart (Real name used in serious
    novels and critical works) Michael Innes
    (pseudonym used in detective novels)
  • Charles L. Dodgson (Real name used in works on
    mathematics and logic) Lewis Carroll (pseudonym
    used in literary works).

25
22.2b3 Contemporary authors
  • If a contemporary author uses more than one
    pseudonym or his or her real name and one or more
    pseudonyms, use, as the basis for the heading for
    each work, the name appearing in it. Make
    references to connect the names
  • Ed McBain Evan Hunter
  • Philippa Carr, Victoria Holt, Kathleen Kellow,
    Jean Plaidy, Ellalice Tate

26
22.2C Change of Name
  • If a person (other than one using a pseudonym or
    pseudonyms) has changed his or her name, choose
    the latest name or form of name unless there is
    reason to believe that an earlier name will
    persist as the name by which the person is better
    known
  • Cassius Clay vs Muhammad Ali
  • Benjamin Disraeli vs Earl of Beaconsfield

27
Choice among different forms (22.3)
  • Fullness
  • Use the form most commonly found, make
    references.
  • Language
  • Use the form from the language of most of the
    works.
  • Greek Latin vernacular forms
  • Use form most commonly found in reference sources

28
Choice (cont.)
  • Names written in roman alphabet and established
    in English form
  • Use English form
  • Names written in non-roman script
  • given names choose the form well-established in
    English Language reference sources.
  • Surnames (LC uses alternate rule22.3C) enter the
    surname as it is appears in three reference
    sources (LC)

29
Entry Element
  • General rule if a persons name consists of
    several parts, select as the entry element that
    part of the name under which the person would
    normally be listed in authoritative alphabetic
    lists in his or her language or country of
    residence

30
Order of Elements
  • If the entry element is the first element, enter
    in direct order -- if the first element is a
    surname follow it by a comma.
  • If the entry element is not the first element,
    transpose the elements of the name preceding the
    entry element. Follow the entry element by a
    comma.
  • If the entry is a proper name in a title of
    nobility follow it by the personal name in direct
    order and then by the part of the title denoting
    rank

31
Rules for entry of surnames
  • Compound surnames
  • hyphenated surnames
  • Other compound surnames
  • Nature uncertain
  • Place names
  • Surnames with prefixes
  • Different rules for different languages/nationalit
    ies

32
Other Rules
  • Entry under titles of nobility
  • Entry under given name
  • Roman Names
  • Initials, letters and numerals
  • Phrases

33
Additions to names
  • Titles of nobility or Honor
  • Saints
  • Royalty
  • Popes, Bishops, etc.
  • Dates
  • Distinguishing terms

34
Corporate Bodies
  • General Rule
  • Enter a corporate body directly under the name by
    which it is commonly identified, except when the
    rules that follow provide for entering it under
    the name of a higher or related body or under the
    name of a government.
  • Determine the name by which a corporate body is
    commonly identified from items issued by that
    body in its language, or, when this condition
    does not apply, from reference sources.

35
Romanization
  • If the name of the body is in a language written
    in a non-roman script, romanize the name
    according to the table for that language adopted
    by the cataloging agency.

36
Variant forms of name
  • If variant forms are found in items issued by the
    body, use the name as it appears in the chief
    sources of information
  • If variant spellings, use the form resulting from
    official changes in orthography -- or the
    predominant spelling
  • If variant names appear in the chief source of
    information, use the name that is presented
    formally. If no name is presented formally, or if
    they all are, use the predominant form of name.
    IF there is no predominant form, use a brief form
    (including an initialism or an acronym) that
    would differentiate the body from others with the
    same or similar brief names.

37
Variant Names, Special Rules 24.3
  • Language - use the form in the official language
    of the body (if there are more than one official
    languages and one of them is English choose the
    English form).
  • If name appears in English on items issued by the
    body, use the English form.
  • If a body is frequently identified by a
    conventional form of name in reference sources in
    its own language, use the conventional name
  • Ancient and International bodies -- if there is a
    firmly established English form use it.

38
Variant Names, Special Rules (cont)
  • Religious orders - A) conventional name in
    English, B) form in english-speaking countries,
    or C) name in the language of its country of
    origin
  • Governments, use the conventional name of a
    government, unless the official name is in common
    use. The conventional name of a government is the
    geographic name of the area over which the
    government exercises jurisdiction.

39
Addition, Omissions, and Modifications
  • Names not conveying the idea of a corporate body
    -- add a general designation in English
  • Names of countries, states, provinces -- add the
    name of the country, state, province, etc. in
    which it is located.
  • Years (when same name used by two different
    bodies)

40
Omissions
  • Omit an initial article unless the heading is to
    file under the article (e.g. a corporate name
    that begins with an article that is the first
    part of the name of a person or place).

41
Governments
  • Add the type of jurisdiction if needed

42
Conferences
  • Omit from the name of a conf. Indications of its
    number, frequency or years of convocation.
  • Add number after name
  • Add date after name
  • Add location after name

43
Subordinate and related bodies
  • Enter subordinate bodies directly under their own
    name unless its name is one of the following
    types
  • A name containing a term that by definition
    implies that the body is part of another
  • A name containing a word that normally implies
    administrative subordination, provided that the
    name of the higher body is required to identify
    it.
  • A name that is general in nature or that does no
    more than indicate a geographic, chronological or
    numbered or lettered subdivision of the parent
    body
  • A name that does not convey the idea of a
    corporate body
  • A name of a university faculty, school etc that
    simply indicates a field of study
  • A name that includes the entire name of higher
    body.

44
Uniform Titles
  • Uniform titles are the means for bringing
    together all catalog entries for a work when
    various manifestations (editions, translations,
    etc) have appeared under various titles.
  • Need to use Uniform titles varies with the
    catalog and even with the particular work.

45
Uniform Titles -- When?
  • Base the decision to use a Uniform Title on
  • How well the work is known
  • How many manifestations of the work are involved
  • Whether the main entry is under title.
  • Whether the work was originally in another
    language
  • The extent to which the catalog is used for
    research purposes.

46
General Rule 25.2
  • When the manifestations (other than revised
    editions) of a work appear under various titles,
    select one title as the uniform title as
    instructed in 25.3-25.4
  • Use a uniform title if
  • 1) The work has appeared under different titles
    proper
  • OR 2) the title proper needs the addition of
    other elements to organize the file
  • OR 3) the title used as the main or added entry
    heading for a work needs to be distinguished from
    the main or added entry heading for another work
  • OR 4) the title of the work is obscured by the
    wording of the title proper

47
Format
  • Inclose the uniform title in square brackets and
    give it before the title proper. If the work is
    entered under title, give the uniform title as
    the heading with square brackets.
  • MARC Main Entry uniform titles go into 130 -- and
    are in 130 in authority records. Otherwise,
    uniform titles go into 240 -- which are listed as
    100s in authority records

48
Not Uniform Title
  • Do not use a uniform title for a manifestation of
    a work in the same language that is a revision or
    updating of the original work. Relate editions
    not connected by uniform titles by giving the
    title of the earlier edition in a note in the
    entry for the later edition.

49
Works after 1500
  • Use a title or form of the title in the original
    language by which a work created after 1500 has
    become known through use in manifestations of the
    work or in reference sources.
  • If no title in the original language is
    established as being the one by which the work is
    best known, or in case of doubt, use the title
    proper of the original edition.

50
1500 cont.
  • Omit from such titles (title proper of original
    ed.)
  • Introductory phrases (e.g. Here beginneth the
    tale of )
  • Statements of responsibility that are part of the
    title proper, if such an omission is permissible
    grammatically and the statement is not essential
    to the meaning of the title.

51
25.3C
  • If there is simultaneous publication under
    different titles in same language use the title
    of the edition published in the country of the
    cataloging agency.

52
Works Before 1500
  • Use the title most frequently found in
  • Modern editions
  • early editions
  • manuscript copies
  • Classical and Byzantine Greek
  • Use the well-established English title for such a
    work -- or the Latin title if there is no
    established English title

53
Before 1500 cont.
  • Anonymous works written neither in Greek nor in
    roman script.
  • If the original language of an anonymous work
    created before 1501 is not Greek or in a roman
    script, use an established title in English, if
    there is one.
  • Otherwise -- transliterate

54
Additions
  • Phrases (play, etc.)
  • Language

55
Collective titles
  • Works, etc.
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