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Title: Cataloguing Ephemera:


1
Cataloguing Ephemera
  • Records of the Past

2
  • A presentation by
  • Samantha Duncan
  • and
  • Katherine Kalsbeek
  • LIBR 513 Description and Name Access
  • Dr. Martin Dowding
  • 13 November 2003

3
Introduction
  • Explore the question What is ephemera?
  • Examine the reasons why ephemera is a valuable
    primary resource for researchers
  • Provide you with a brief overview of the history
    of the bibliographic control of ephemera
  • Identify the tools one should employ when
    cataloguing ephemera
  • Examine the digitization of ephemera

4
Ephemera A definition
  • Attempting to define the question, What is
    ephemera is a difficult activity most
    librarians have different responses to the
    question.
  • In particular, ephemera is often confused with
    gray literature. In Library Literature and
    Information Science with Full-texts thesaurus,
    for example, gray literature is a a sub-heading
    of the main heading, ephemera. However, there
    is a clear distinction between these two types of
    materials.

5
Ephemera A definition, contd.
  • Gray Literature may be defined as print materials
    that are not usually available through regular
    market channels because they were never
    commercially published, listed, or priced
    (Reitz, 2002)
  • Examples reports, doctoral dissertations and
    conference proceedings.
  • Gray literature is often issued by national,
    regional or local governments, universities, and
    industrial firms
  •  So, what then, is ephemera?

6
Ephemera A definition, contd.
  • There is one definition, composed by Maurice
    Rickards, the founder of the international
    British Ephemera Society and author of the
    Encyclopedia of Ephemera, that most people will,
    albeit uneasily, agree to.
  • In particular, Maurice Rickards defines ephemera
    as the minor transient documents of everyday
    life (Holcombe, 2001).

7
Ephemera A definition, contd.
  • Joan Reitz, in ODLIS The Online Dictionary of
    Library and Information Science, expands on
    Rickards definition and defines ephemeral
    materials as the materials of everyday life,
    generally considered to have little or no
    permanent value, usually because they are
    produced in large quantities or in disposable
    formats. Ephemeral items are sometimes retained
    and exhibited for their graphic qualities or for
    their association with a specific person, event,
    or activity (2002).

8
Ephemera A definition, contd.
  • Examples of ephemeral materials include
  • trade literature (e.g. catalogues)
  • record covers
  • paper dolls
  • comics
  • Christmas cards
  • menus

Ikea Catalogue Archive, 2003
9
Types of Ephemera
  • The term ephemera is difficult to define, in
    part, because there are so many different genres
    of ephemera. As well, ephemeral materials vary
    in their shape, size and format.
  • At the present time, there are over 150 genres
    that may be described as ephemeral in nature.

10
Types of Ephemera, contd.
  • Traditionally, these genres have been classified
    according to their format
  • Visual/graphic ephemera
  • Ephemeral materials that are primarily graphic in
    nature.
  • Examples paintings, posters, maps
  • Printed ephemera
  • Ephemeral materials that are primarily textual in
    nature.
  • Examples pamphlets, broadsides

11
Types of Ephemera, contd.
  • 3. Electronic ephemera
  • Electronic ephemera is material that has been,
    as the Working Party on Ephemera states, born
    digital (2003, p. 30). Therefore, this
    definition excludes digitized material and
    includes material that has originated from an
    electronic device and is created in a digital
    form (example an email).
  • Examples web-pages, pop-up ads

12
Types of Ephemera, contd.
  • However, this system of classification is
    problematic for two main reasons.
  • Firstly, the boundaries between these three
    types of ephemera blur.
  • Example Historic American Sheet Music, Uncle
    Sammy, 1904 (Duke University Rare Book,
    Manuscript, and Special Collections Library)
  • This collection may be classified as representing
    two types of ephemera Sheet Music, Map

13
Types of Ephemera, contd.
  • Secondly, it not the physical form of the
    ephemeral material that is most important.
  • For example, in Ephemera The stuff of history
    (2003), the Working Party on Ephemera discusses
    the ways in which ephemeral materials develop new
    contexts when they are collected as cultural
    artifacts.

14
Types of Ephemera, contd.
  • In particular, using the example of beer mats,
    the Working Party on Ephemera states that beer
    mats are not collected by people for their use as
    beer mats. Rather, beer mats are collected
    because they provide important information on the
    breweries, advertising and design of the time
    period in which they were produced.

Morean, 2001
15
Types of Ephemera, contd.
  • Stephen Zietz (1992) offers cataloguers an
    alternative way in which to describe ephemeral
    materials.
  • In particular, in Ephemera MARC-formatted
    cataloguing records, Zietz distinguishes between
    the more than 150 genres of ephemera. He
    classifies ephemeral materials, according to
    their use, into four main categories.

16
Types of Ephemera, contd.
  • Zietzs four categories of ephemera (1992, p.
    152)
  • Practical Materials
  • Includes tickets, application forms, marriage
    certificates
  • Promotional Materials
  • Includes advertisements, industrial and
    self-promotion, and promotion of
    services/products
  • Non-promotional Materials
  • Includes political, artistic and literary
    productions, sociopolitical and religious
    materials
  • Mixed MaterialsIncludes promotional materials
    which have an artistic, literary, sociological or
    religious bias

17
Types of Ephemera, contd.
An Example of Promotional Material Red Cloud
Chewing Tobacco (1872)
Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs
Division, Detroit Publishing Company Collection,
2003
18
Types of Ephemera, contd.
  • The Red Cloud Chewing Tobacco label, from 1872,
    is an example of what Zietz terms promotional
    material.
  • According to Barbara Orbach Natanson,
    nineteenth-century tobacco labels are an
    important source of cultural information for
    researchers They invite analysis of the
    connections among the marketing of particular
    products, the intended customers for the
    products, and the nature of the imagery used in
    the products' packaging (2001) .

19
Types of Ephemera, contd.
  • Therefore, researchers from a variety of fields,
    such as advertising, history and cultural
    studies, may be interested in studying the Red
    Cloud Chewing Tobacco label.
  • As Natanson states, although researchers have,
    to a certain extent, mined the product labels for
    illustration and for research on representation
    of racial and ethnic groups, they remain fertile
    territory for scholarly exploration, particularly
    with respect to the connections among gender
    representation, commerce, and consumption
    (2001).

20
What is the value of ephemera in an
information-based environment?
  • Why should we, as librarians, invest money, time,
    and resources into collecting and cataloguing
    ephemera on an item-level basis?
  • Ephemera has been described as raw, unedited
    historythe purest kind, and the other half of
    history the half without guile (Ott,1997, p.
    11)
  • Ephemera is an invaluable source of cultural and
    socio-political information
  • The role of ephemera may be underscored
    particularly in light of the proliferation of
    official accounts versus actual experiences.
    In all cases the official documentation proved
    to be inadequate to capture the fullest
    experience or account (Snyder,1996, p. 55)

21
What is the value of ephemera in an
information-based environment? contd.
  • The costs of organizing, cataloguing, and
    providing access to ephemera are eventually
    balanced by the benefit to the library collection
    as a whole
  • Many ephemera collections contain graphic
    materials and advertisements, which were meant to
    appeal to all people at the time they were
    produced, and still hold appeal for many people
    today.
  • Public appreciation for access to these kinds of
    materials will be high if they are aware of their
    existence
  • Vintage advertisements, for example, are now very
    popular for home décor and accents
  • If ephemera is not organized, catalogued, and
    contextualized, it is only useful to researchers
    who know of its existence, and even then its
    usefulness is limited

22
What is the value of ephemera in an
information-based environment? contd.
  • Ephemera, such as the Red Cloud Tobacco Label,
    may be used as primary source material for all
    sorts of subjects, including history, art
    history, sociology, advertising, and fashion
  • Ephemera is a reflection of popular culture and
    symbolism. Studies of graphic and literary
    styles, as well as popular images and fashions
    from any era, can be enhanced by viewing ephemera
    from that era.
  • Ephemera collections can be studied to enrich
    official historical views of events and trends,
    and to gain a deeper understanding of cultural
    experiences.
  • If collections are catalogued and made available,
    researchers will in turn help by offering their
    expertise in identifying and adding value to
    them.

23
What is the value of ephemera in an
information-based environment? contd.
  • When using ephemera as a primary material
    resource, however, one must be careful
  • One problem with using ephemera as primary
    source material, however, is that it often
    arrives at a researchers desk with no
    attribution, provenance, natural history, or
    authority workin other words, with no context.
    This makes it hard to argue from ephemera as well
    as with it. (Ott, 1996, p. 12)
  • Ephemera might be the only available information
    about certain historical events such as concerts,
    lectures, etc. There is often no means,
    therefore, of verifying dates, times, or actual
    occurrences of the events against other sources.

24
What is the value of ephemera in an
information-based environment? contd.
  • Researchers must be wary because much ephemera
    was not (and still is not) subject to editorial
    restraints or review. Anyone can produce and
    disseminate ephemera, and often the wildest, most
    exaggerated ephemera is the most popular.
  • Using ephemera to date catalogues or objects may
    be useful, but it may also be misleading.
    Companies often used the same printing blocks for
    cover art and images over a number of years, even
    after products were no longer sold and styles
    were out of date (Ott,1996)
  • This is still a problem today, particularly with
    web sites that are not maintained or updated.
    Many web sites have no date on them, so it is
    hard to tell when they were created or whether or
    not the information in them is still current

25
Collection Management Issues
  • There are at least four types of institutions
    collecting and storing ephemera museums,
    archives, libraries, and private collectors such
    as corporations and agencies
  • If collections are catalogued at all, it is
    generally at collection level (i.e. list of
    artists names or titles supplied by cataloger)
  • All of the different types of items in different
    sizes and formats present several issues for
    preservation and storage of collections

26
Collection Management Issues, contd.
  • So much ephemera is produced today that it is
    hard to determine a collection policy that will
    include everything important and avoid overlap
    with collections of other institutions
  • The difficulty in setting a policy for collecting
    modern ephemera is illustrated in Ephemera The
    stuff of history (2003)
  • Some institutions collect in a regular and
    controlled way everything that can be found on a
    different day, others collect around particular
    events they hold to be important locally or
    nationally and at least one individual is known
    to have saved everything that fell through his
    letterbox over a period of decades (p. 19).

27
History of cataloguing ephemera
  • Unlike serials and sheet music, for example,
    there is no tradition of cataloguing ephemera.
    If ephemera is catalogued at all, it is on a
    minimal level and, in most situations, the
    materials are usually located in vertical files.
    There are three main reasons why this is the
    case.
  • Cost
  • Even items from the famous John Johnson
    collection, located at the Bodleian Library, were
    thrown-out in the 1930s because there was no
    money available to catalogue this
    one-million-item collection detailing the history
    of printing from the sixteenth century to the
    twentieth century (Clinton, 1981, p.16) .

28
History of cataloguing ephemera, contd.
  • 2. Time
  • One need only look at the MARC record for the
    Red Cloud Chewing Tobacco label to see how much
    time would be required to catalogue ephemera on
    an item-level basis (To view the MARC record for
    this item, please click here)

29
History of cataloguing ephemera, contd.
  • 3. Throwaway materials
  • Traditionally, ephemera has not been valued by
    researchers as a source of historical, cultural
    and societal information. Rather, ephemeral
    materials have been and continue to be thought of
    as throwaway materials. In the 1860s, for
    example, it was calculated that over one thousand
    million items were distributed annually on the
    streets of London, England (Chartered Institute
    of Library and Information Professionals, 2003,
    p.19. Imagine how many more items, print and
    electronic, are distributed today. Do you, for
    instance, save those IKEA catalogues that you
    receive free of charge in the mail each year?

30
Cataloguing Tools and Resources
  • Ephemera is an awkward customer that fits no one
    pattern easily
  • Linda Stanley (1996)

31
Cataloguing Tools and Resources, contd.
  • AACR2R and MARC 21 are not the only sources that
    one should consult when cataloguing ephemera.
  • Why? Zietz argues that AACR2R often does not fit
    the medium.
  • Instead, Zietz argues for what he terms a hybrid
    approach to cataloguing ephemera. In
    particular, this hybrid approach involves
    creating a MARC record for an item by combining
    from as many codes as necessary the most
    appropriate rules (1992, p. 155).

32
Cataloguing Tools and Resources, contd.
  • Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, 2nd Edition,
    Revised (AACR2R)
  • (Chapters 2, 4, 8)
  • Archives, Personal Papers and Manuscripts
  • Encyclopedia of Ephemera
  • Graphic Materials
  • MARC 21
  • Art and Architecture Thesaurus

33
Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, 2nd Edition,
Revised (AACR2R)
  • There is no single chapter in AACR2R that deals
    specifically with ephemera.
  • Of the chapters in AACR2R, one may consult
    chapters two (Books, Pamphlets and Printed
    Sheets), four (Manuscripts), eight (Graphic
    Materials) and twelve (Serials).
  • However, many of the rules in AACR2R are not
    easily applied to ephemera.
  • As Zietz states, most ephemera have no real
    title, statement of responsibility area or
    edition (1992, p. 155)

34
Archives, Personal Papers and Manuscripts (APPM)
  • Similar to AACR2R, this archival code is divided
    into two parts.
  • Part One Concerns the description of an item and
    corresponds to chapters one and four of AACR2R.
    Specific rule number citations to AACR2R are
    provided in square brackets following each rule.
  • Part Two Provides rules for the choice and form
    of headings and uniform titles.

35
Archives, Personal Papers and Manuscripts
(APPM), contd.
  • In contrast to AACR2R, APPM emphasizes an
    archival approach to cataloguing
  • Archival materials are dependant on the context
    of their creation.They most often exist in
    groups or collectivities and are managed at the
    collective leveland they are often unique,
    generally unpublished and usually generated as
    documentary by-products of certain kinds of human
    activity (Hensen, 1989, p. 4).
  • APPMs archival approach, rather than AARC2Rs
    bibliographic approach, is more appropriate for
    describing and providing access to ephemeral
    materials.

36
Encyclopedia of Ephemera
  • An essential resource for any cataloguer of
    ephemera
  • From appointment cards to email messages, each of
    the 550 entries in this encyclopedia describes a
    type of ephemeral material and both its use(s) at
    the time it was published and its use(s) as a
    research tool.

37
Graphic Materials Rules for Describing Original
Items and Historical Collections
  • This resource was first put together in 1982 by
    Elizabeth Betz for the Library of Congress. It
    was revised in 1996 and is now available online
    with the 1996 revisions highlighted
  • Available at
  • http//www.tlcdelivers.com/tlc/crs/grph0199.htm
  • Graphic Materials is meant to be used, along with
    AACR2R, by cataloguers dealing with graphic
    materials as well as by people working in
    museums, archives, historical societies,
    corporations, and private collections

38
Graphic Materials Rules for Describing Original
Items and Historical Collections, contd.
  • Provides help and examples for describing visual
    objects, which is a very subjective practicethe
    cataloguer must determine the best way to put
    into words how something looks, without
    detracting from the meaning or historical context
    of the item
  • Equal attention is paid to item-level and
    collection-level cataloguing, because although an
    item may have historical or cultural importance
    on its own, and may be catalogued individually,
    it may also derive meaning from the collection of
    which it is a part (Betz,1982).

39
Getty Research Art and Architecture Thesaurus On
Line (AAT)
  • The AAT, Union List of Artist Names (ULAN), and
    Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names (TGN) are
    structured vocabularies that can be used to
    improve access to information about art,
    architecture, and material culture by providing
    subject terms and descriptions
  • Available online at
  • http//www.getty.edu/research/conducting_research
    /vocabularies/aat/

40
MARC 21
  • The Machine Readable Cataloging (MARC) format was
    developed in the 1960s to automate the production
    of catalogue cards.
  • Since then it has grown and evolved to
    accommodate a wider range of formats, including
    electronic records, music and video recordings,
    etc. Although it is not perfect, it is
    time-tested and widely accepted as a standard

41
MARC 21, contd.
  • Benefits of using MARC 21 for cataloguing
    ephemera
  • Most library cataloguers are familiar with it,
    and its use is widespread internationally
  • MARC 21 accommodates for electronic resources and
    URLs, so records may be linked to a digital image
    or web site.
  • Notes fields may be used to fully describe the
    object or document
  • Various items within collections can be linked to
    each other in the catalogue even if they arent
    shelved together (each item could have the name
    of the collection in a searchable field so that
    every item within the collection would be
    displayed together following a keyword search)

42
MARC 21, contd.
  • Disadvantages of using MARC 21 to catalogue
    ephemera
  • Museum curators and archivists are not used to
    the format, and it is not that easy to use
  • Many visual resource professionals are more
    familiar with other formats such as Dublin Core
    and Encoded Archival Description (EAD) to
    describe and markup images and items

43
Cataloguing ephemera
  • Can standards be set and agreed upon by museum
    curators, archivists, librarians, and private
    collectors for bibliographic control of and
    access to ephemera?

44
An analysis and critique of three MARC records
for ephemera
  • Library of Congress
  • Collection-level MARC record
  • Freer and Sackler Galleries Library
  • Collection-level MARC record
  • Freer and Sackler Galleries Library
  • Item-level MARC record

45
MARC record example from the Library of Congress
  • LC Control Number2003556727
  • 00001233cam 22003134a 450
  • 00113147428
  • 00520030519135443.0
  • 007he bmcbbca
  • 008030403s1988 mau bbc 001 0 yid
  • 906__ a 7 b cbc c orignew d 3 e ncip f 20
    g y-genmicro
  • 955__ a vr03 2003-04-03 i vr03 2003-04-03 e
    vr03 2003-05-18 completed010__ a 2003556727
  • 040__ a DLC c DLC d DLC
  • 042__ a pcc05010 a Z637505000 a Hebr Fiche 35
  • 1102_ a Harvard University. b Library.
  • 24510 a Yiddish pamphlets h microform.
  • 260__ a Cambridge, Mass. b Harvard University
    Library, c 1988.
  • 300__ a 4 microfiches b negative.
  • 4901_ a Judaica serials and ephemera v
    checklist no. 16
  • 520__ a Provides an author and title listing of
    4,162 Yiddish-language Judaica pamphlets, all
    microfilmed under the Harvard Library's
    preservation program.
  • 500__ a Cover title.
  • 500__ a Includes indexes.
  • 650_0 a Jews v Bibliography v Microform
    catalogs.

46
MARC record example from the Library of Congress
An Analysis
  • 110 field Harvard University is listed as the
    corporate main entry point
  • 260 field Harvard is also entered in the 260
    imprint field because they did the microfilming
    of the collection
  • 520 field Summary note is keyword
    searchableindicates that there are over 4000
    pamphlets
  • No other notes mentioning date, place, topics

47
Analysis of MARC record example from the Library
of Congress, contd
  • Therefore
  • Access to the collection is reduced to
    author/title, which can only be retrieved from
    this microfilmed index.
  • One would have to visit Library of Congress or
    get information through document delivery to find
    out if an item of interest was even in the
    collection
  • This is an example of collection-level
    cataloguing and is far from ideal in terms of
    access.
  • Researchers have no way of knowing if the
    collection holds anything of value to them
    (unless they know the author or title of the
    pamphlet they are looking for) without thumbing
    through the actual pamphlets.

48
MARC record example from the Library of Congress
Solutions
  • Construct publisher statements and/or date
    information for each group based on internal
    evidence, for example style of printing or
    language style.
  • Categorize the pamphlets by subject, genre, date,
    or location, depending on which is the best fit
  • Take advantage of the 500 fields and
    cross-reference
  • Not necessarily item-level cataloguing for each
    pamphlet, but make the collection more accessible
    by adding value

49
Example The Paul Marks Collection at the Freer
and Sackler Galleries Library
  • Donation received in September, 2000
  • 553 items relating to James McNeil Whistler,
  • Funding for cataloguing and secure storage
    cabinets provided by donor
  • Nothing weeded from the collection
  • 447 item level catalog records
  • 6 collection level catalog records (leftover bits
    that didnt warrant individual records)
  • Levels of cataloguing determined by museum
    curator, who also helped with descriptors and
    categories for collection level cataloguing
  • Cataloguing was contracted out, and the
    contractor worked closely with the curator

50
Example of a collection-level MARC record from
the Freer Gallery Library
  • 001 DCFO03-B533
  • 003 CStRLIN 005 20030410132305.0
  • 008 030408i188u2uuudcua b 00 0deng dcam a
  • 040 DFGcDFG 090 ND237.W6bW957 1880
  • 100 1 Whistler, James McNeill,d1834-1903.
  • 245 10 Marks Collection of James McNeill
    Whistler bbrief articles and other information
    about James McNeill Whistler,f188--
  • 300 lt1gt box bill.
  • 520 This collection contains newspaper articles,
    magazine articles, bibliographies and other
    references, and course syllibi.
  • 590 Includes photocopies.
  • 600 10 Whistler, James McNeill,d1834-1903vEpheme
    ra.
  • 600 10 Marks, Paul G.xArt collectionsvEphemera.
  • 700 1 Marks, Paul G.
  • 950 ND237.W6bW
  • 957 1880i04/10/03 N
  • 950 lFGASAd\MARKS\h12/31/1999 Nqmain
  • 955 lFGASAc1sin Marksi04/10/03 C

51
Collection-level MARC record from the Freer
Gallery Library An Analysis
  • This is a more useful collection-level record
  • 520 field is more informativeprovides more
    description of what is held in the collection
    (articles, course syllabi, etc.)
  • Main entry is more appropriate based on the
    content
  • Title information has been constructed in a way
    that is informative and describes the collection
  • Collection is keyword-searchable in this case

52
Item level MARC record from the Freer/Sackler
Library
  • 001 DCFO02-B1474
  • 003 CStRLIN
  • 005 20030123065821.0
  • 008 021127s1903 fr ac b 00 0dfre dcam a
  • 040 DFGcDFG
  • 090 ND237.W6bG44 1903
  • 100 1 Geffroy, Gustave,d1855-1926.
  • 245 10 Whistler /cGustave Geffroy.
  • 260 Paris? bRevue Universelle,c1903
  • 300 p. 441-445 bill., ports. c30 cm.
  • 500 Caption title. 500 In Revue universelle, no.
    93, September 1, 1903.
  • 500 Photocopy.
  • 504 Includes bibliographical references.
  • 600 10 Whistler, James McNeill,d1834-1903xCritic
    ism and interpretation.
  • 730 0 Revue universelle.
  • 950 ND237.W6bG44 1903i01/23/03 N
  • 950 lFGASAd\MARKS\h12/31/1999 N
  • 955 lFGASAc1sin MARKSi01/23/03 C

53
Item level MARC record from the Freer/Sackler
Library An Analysis
  • One problem with the item level records in the
    Marks Collection is that they are not linked to
    the collection in any fields except 950 and 955
  • This means that the only records that come up
    when a user searches for the Marks Collection are
    the six collection-level records
  • The items are all shelved together, so a user
    could search by call number, but it would be
    easier if every item was linked to the Marks
    Collection in a note field

54
Original cataloguing of a trade catalogue Ikea
2004
IKEA, 2003
55
Original cataloguing of a trade catalogue Ikea
2004, contd.
  • For this presentation, we decided to catalogue an
    IKEA catalogue, an example of a trade catalogue
  • Trade catalogues are useful for design history,
    business history and persons studying advertising
    techniques.
  • We found that constructing the following record
    was a bit problematic because it is a single item
    in the collection, yet it was published as a part
    of a series. However, after consulting Zietz and
    other writers, we concluded that the record
    should reflect the fact that the catalogue is a
    part of a series.

56
Our MARC record for the 2004 IKEA Catalogue
57
2004 IKEA Catalogue An examination of the 008
field of the MARC record
  • 031106c19519999xxuarcc0a2engu

We decided to catalogue the IKEA catalogue as a
Continuing Resource currently published.
Positions 07-10 contain the beginning date of
publication (1951) and positions 11-14 contain
9999.
58
2004 IKEA Catalogue An examination of the 110
field of the MARC record
  • AACR2R Rules Consulted
  • 21.1B2, 24.1A, and 24.4B1
  • Explanation
  • According to 21.1B2, IKEA should be the main
    entry because a catalogue is an example of works
    of an administrative nature dealing with the
    corporate body itself
  • The name IKEA does not convey the fact that it is
    the name of a corporate body, so according to
    24.4B1, cataloguers should add the name firm in
    parentheses.

59
2004 IKEA Catalogue An examination of the 245
field of the MARC record
  • AACR2R Rules Consulted
  • 12.0B1, 12.0B2, 12.1B1, 12.1E1iii, 12.1C1, 1.1C,
    12.7B3
  • Explanation
  • Often with trade catalogues, cataloguers must
    supply the name for the item in square brackets
    (as is the case for most ephemera). If there was
    no title for an item, the rules in Graphic
    Materials may supplement those in AACR2R.
  • However, in this case, there was a clear title
    and subtitle for the item.
  • The title is listed both on the cover and spine
    of the catalogue.

60
2004 IKEA Catalogue An examination of the 260
field of the MARC record
  • AACR2R Rules Consulted
  • 12.4C1, 1.4C, 12.4C, 12.4D1, 1.4F6
  • Explanation
  • As Bernadette Archer notes, formal statements
    relating to the place, name and date of
    publication are not usually present in trade
    literature, but it is generally assumed to be
    the manufacturer or retailer of the product
    (2001, p. 27).

61
2004 IKEA Catalogue An examination of the 260
field of the MARC record, contd.
  • If the publication information was not available,
    similar to cartographic material, one should
    consider the style of the printing and
    illustration.evidence from the objects featured
    in the catalogueor external evidence (such as
    inserted price lists or supplements) to date
    items.
  • In this case, the publication information is
    located vertically on the back of the catalogue.
  • We did place the place of publication (sub field
    a) in parentheses with a question mark, because
    we were not completely certain that the USA is
    the place of publication.

62
2004 IKEA Catalogue An examination of the 300
field of the MARC record
  • AACR2R Rules Consulted
  • 12.5B1, 12.5C1, 12.5D1
  • Explanation
  • Detailed Information concerning the physical
    extent of an item is also very important to
    include.
  • Ephemera varies widely in size and shape, so a
    statement describing the physical extent of an
    item is often the best way to distinguish a
    single sheet from a 1,000 page catalogue
    (Archer, 2001, p. 27).
  • Zietz suggests that cataloguers use Graphic
    Materials if they find that the specific material
    designations in AACR2R fail to describe their
    items in hand.

63
2004 IKEA Catalogue An examination of the 310
field of the MARC record
  • AACR2R Rules Consulted
  • 12.7B1
  • Explanation
  • After looking at the IKEA web site, we discovered
    that the IKEA catalogue has been distributed on
    an annual basis since 1951.

64
2004 IKEA Catalogue An examination of the 500
fields of the MARC record
  • AACR2R Rules Consulted
  • 12.4F1, 12.7B11.1
  • 12.7B3
  • Explanation
  • The 500 fields should be used to provide
    information that is not evident in the preceding
    fields.

65
2004 IKEA Catalogue An examination of the 520
field of the MARC record
  • AACR2R Rules Consulted
  • 12.7B18
  • Explanation
  • Summary note field
  • For lengthy pieces of ephemera, use the 520 field
    to provide a detailed, yet concise description
    of the contents of the ephemeral material.

66
2004 IKEA Catalogue An examination of the 530
field of the MARC record
  • AACR2R Rules Consulted
  • 12.7B16
  • Explanation
  • The catalogue is also available in an online
    format. Therefore, in accordance with rule
    12.7B16, we included this information

67
2004 IKEA Catalogue An examination of the 580
field of the MARC record
  • AACR2R Rules Consulted
  • 12.7B8f
  • Explanation
  • The IKEA 2004 catalogue was produced in 38
    editions, 17 languages and distributed in 28
    countries. Therefore, we included a note
    indicating that this is the Canadian edition of
    the catalogue.

68
2004 IKEA Catalogue An examination of the 580
field of the MARC record, contd.
  • Rule 12.7B8f instructs cataloguers that if the
    resource is one of two or more editions differing
    in partial content and/or language, give the name
    of the other editions. However, if a resource is
    published in more editions than can be named
    conveniently (which is the case), cataloguers are
    instructed to make a general note.

69
2004 IKEA Catalogue An examination of the 780
field of the MARC record
  • AACR2R Rules Consulted
  • 12.7B4.2
  • Explanation
  • Until 1980, the IKEA catalogue was named the
    IKEA katalog, so we included this information
    in the preceding entry field.

70
2004 IKEA Catalogue An examination of the 856
field of the MARC record
  • AACR2R Rules Consulted
  • 12.7B16
  • Explanation
  • In accordance with rule 12.7B16, we again
    included the URL for the online version of the
    catalogue in the 856 field.

71
Future of cataloguing ephemera
  • Digitization
  • Technology continues to improve, and digitization
    is becoming more reliable and less expensive.
    Media format are (hopefully) less likely to
    become obsolete as quickly as they used to
  • Visual resource professionals are working hard to
    find a suitable standard for marking up,
    cataloguing, and exchanging digital images
  • Library of Congress An American Time Capsule
    Three Generations of Broadsides and Other Printed
    Ephemera
  • National Library of Medicine Here Today, Here
    Tomorrow Varieties of Medical Ephemera

72
Advantages of digitizing ephemera
  • Preservation
  • Many originals are fragile and brittle, or have
    degraded to the point that they are no longer
    usable
  • Creating a digital surrogate gives the user an
    opportunity to view the item without handling it,
    which might be enough
  • Access
  • Scanning ephemera and linking the images to
    records in the catalog makes it much easier for a
    researcher to search the collection and find what
    he or she needs

73
Advantages of digitizing ephemera, contd.
  • Multiple use
  • Digital images can be made available online
    through the museum or library catalog, or even on
    the World Wide Web. Users can access the
    collection from all over the world, and any
    number of researchers can view the collection at
    once
  • Widening user base
  • Younger generations of students and researchers
    are used to quick results and digital formats.
    Historical image and ephemera collections can be
    used in a classroom setting to bring a new and
    enriched perspective to social and cultural
    studies

74
Disadvantages of digitizing ephemera
  • Cost
  • Digitizing an entire collection is an enormous
    task in terms of equipment, time, and expertise
  • In many cases, however, this cost can be offset
    by sale of images
  • Time
  • Digitizing is not as simple as just scanning an
    image.
  • Although images can be scanned and given an
    accession number or other identifying tag, and
    not fully catalogued until a request is made, it
    is better to link each image with a catalogue
    record at the start of the project.

75
Disadvantages of digitizing ephemera, contd.
  • Lifespan of digital media
  • Formats and markup standards have yet to be set
    across the board for image cataloguing. Until
    they are, smaller libraries and institutions will
    be wary of taking on large-scale digitization
    projects because of the threat of wasting money
    on an obsolete format

76
Future of cataloguing ephemera
  • Question What level of collection development
    of current ephemera should be employed by
    librarians today?
  • Pop-up ads
  • Email messages
  • Concert and party fliers
  • Web sites
  • Library of Congress Way Back Machine

77
Bibliography
  • American Antiquarian Society. (2002). Ephemera at
    the American Antiquarian Society. Retrieved 7
    November, 2003, from http//www.americanantiquari
    an.org/ephemera.htmArcher, B. (2001). Tools of
    the trade cataloguing trade literature. Art
    Libraries Journal, 26(2), 25-28.Chartered
    Institute of Library and Information
    Professionals. Working Party on Ephemera.
    (2003, January). Ephemera The stuff of history.
    Retrieved 8 November, 2003, from http//www.cilip
    .org.uk/about/ephemera.pdfClinton, A. (1981).
    Printed ephemera Collection, organization,
    and access. London Bingley.Docampo, J.,
    Prado, R. L. d. (2001). Are the latest exhibition
    ephemera available? Problems and solutions for
    a neglected material in museum libraries. Art
    Libraries Journal, 26(2), 29- 37.

78
Bibliography, contd.
  • Duke University. Rare Book Manuscript and
    Special Collections Library. (2003). Uncle
    Sammy, 1904. Retrieved 1 November,2003, from
    http//scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/
  • Greenberg, J. (1996). Subject control of
    ephemera MARC format options. Popular Culture in
    Libraries, 4(1), 71-91.Hadley, N. (2001). Access
    and description of visual ephemera. Collection
    Management, 25(4), 39-50.
  • Holcombe, E. A. (2001). Difficult to find and
    keep Providing access toephemera. Retrieved 17
    October, 2003, from http//conferences.alia.org.a
    u/shllc2001/papers/holcombe.html
  • IKEA. (2003). Catalogue cover archive. Retrieved
    1 November, 2003,from http//www.ikea.ca/ms/en_CA
    /about_ikea/timeline/intro.html
  • Library of Congress. (2002). American Memory An
    American TimeCapsule Three centuries of
    broadsides and other printedephemera. Retrieved
    7 November, 2003, fromhttp//www.memory.loc.gov/a
    mmem/rbpehtml/pehome.html

79
Bibliography, contd.
  • Library of Congress. Print and Photographs
    Division. (2003). Red Cloud chewing tobacco /
    Strobridge Co. lith. Retrieved 1 November,
    2003, from http//hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3a38462
    Makepeace, C. E. (1985). Ephemera A book on its
    collection, conservation, and use. Aldershot,
    Hants., England Brookfield.Morean, D. J.
    (2001). Columbia Beer. Retrieved 12 November,
    2003, from http//www.breweriana.com/matmain.html
    Natanson, N. O. (2001). Product labels.
    Retrieved 1 November, 2003, from
    http//www.memory.loc.gov/ammem/awhhtml/awpnp6/la
    bels.html
  • National Library of Medicine. (2003). Here today,
    here tomorrow Varieties of medical pphemera
    The online version of an exhibit held at the
    National Library of Medicine May 22 through
    September 11, 1995 Lobby, Building 38 National
    Institutes of Health. Retrieved 15 November,
    2003, from http//www.nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/ephe
    mera/ephemera.html

80
Bibliography, contd.
  • Ott, K. (1997). Reading paper ephemera Issues in
    interpreting nineteenth-century graphics.
    Popular Culture in Libraries, 4(2), 11-24.
  • Pace, A. K. (2002, April). Black, White, and
    Shades of Gray (Literature) on the Web.
    Computers in Libraries, 22(4), 44-46.Phillpot,
    C. (1995). Flies in the files Ephemera in the
    art library. Art Documentation, 14, 13-14.
  • Reitz, J. M. (2002). ODLIS Online dictionary of
    Library and Information Science. Retrieved 4
    November, 2003, from http//www.wcsu.edu/library
    /odlis.html
  • Rickards, M., Twyman, M., De Beaumont, S.,
    Tanner, A. (2000). The encyclopedia of
    ephemera A guide to the fragmentary documents
    of everyday life for the collector, curator,
    and historian. New York Routledge.
  • Smith, D. A. (1996). Intellectual control of
    ephemera A museum's perspective. Popular
    Culture in Libraries, 4(1), 63-70.

81
Bibliography, contd.
  • Starr, D. A. (2001). Cataloging artist files one
    library's approach to providing integrated
    access to ephemeral material. International Catal
    oguing and Bibliographic Control, 30(1), 8-10.
  • Stone, R. (1997). Junk as heritage The
    collecting of printed ephemera on a national
    scale. Retrieved 6 November, 2003,
    from http//www.nla.gov.au/nla/staffpaper/rstone1
    .html
  • Urbanski, V., Chang, B. C., Karon, B. L.,
    Swanson, E. (1992). Cataloging unpublished
    nonprint materials a manual of suggestions,
    comments, and examples. Lake Crystal,
    Minn. Soldier Creek Press.
  • Wrighting, A. (1985). Cataloguing ephemera a
    student's project. Catalogue Index(76-77),
    15-16.
  • Zietz, S. J. (1992). Ephemera MARC-formatted
    cataloging records. Rare Books Manuscripts
    Librarianship, 7(2), 152-159.
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