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ISBN13: | 9781783306282 |
ISBN10: | 1783306289 |
Kötéstípus: | Puhakötés |
Terjedelem: | 152 oldal |
Méret: | 234x156 mm |
Nyelv: | angol |
518 |
From Cataloguing to Metadata Creation
GBP 40.00
Kattintson ide a feliratkozáshoz
A Prosperónál jelenleg nincsen raktáron.
From Cataloguing to Metadata Creation is a cultural
and methodological introduction to the evolution of
cataloguing towards metadata creation process in the digital era. It is a journey
through the founding principles and the objectives of the 'information
organisation' service that libraries offer.
Cataloguing has always produced a catalogue, while the creation
of metadata has produced the metadata of given resources. However, in this
digital age, the two are more connected than ever. A catalogue is made up of
metadata that can be searched, identified, structured and selected. This then
means the metadata creation process is adopted as a part of cataloguing.
From
Cataloguing to Metadata Creation
is a cultural and methodological introduction to the evolution of
cataloguing towards the metadata creation process in the digital era. It is a journey through the founding principles and
the objectives of the 'information organisation' service that libraries offer. The book aims to
outline the new library context, highlighting continuities and innovations
compared to traditional cataloguing and intends to trace the path from
traditional cataloguing to the new metadata creation process.
Prefaces (Barbara B. Tillett and Peter Lor)
Acknowledgments
List of Acronyms
1. Cataloguing and metadata. The centrality
of a cultural and technical activity
2. Panta rei
2.1 Metanoia
2.2 New concepts and new
terminology
2.3 Metadata: a polysemantic
term
2.4 Libraries, Semantic Web and linked
data: the data librarian
2.5 Metadata and
bibliographic control
2.6 The importance of the
catalogue
2.7 Two pitfalls for cataloguing and the
catalogue?
2.8 How catalogues have to change to be of
the Web and not just on the Web?
2.9 New discovery tools: data.bnf.fr
3. Principles and bibliographic models
3.1 Bibliographic models
3.2 Paris Principles
3.3 ICP
3.4 FRBR
3.5 FRAD
3.6 FRSAD
3.7 FRBRoo
3.8 IFLA LRM
3.9 Family of works
4. Description of resources
4.1
Description: a cultural and technical process
4.2 A new way
to describe
4.3 Object of the description
4.4 Resource
analysis: the bibliographic analysis
4.5 Sources of information
4.6 Main sources of information to describe a book
4.7 Types of description
4.8 Levels of description
5. Access to resources
5.1 Access: authority data
5.2 Relationships
5.3 Author and title
5.4 Authority control: authorised access point
5.5 Entity Identifiers
5.6 VIAF
5.7 ISNI
6. Exchange formats and description
standards: MARC and ISBD
6.1 MARC, UNIMARC, MARC21
6.2 BIBFRAME
6.3 ISBD
6.4 ISBD: Consolidated Edition
6.5 ISBD: purposes
7. RDA: some basics
7.1 RDA
8. Subject Cataloguing (or subject
indexing): some basics
8.1 A separate path
Concluding afterword (Giovanni Bergamin)
Notes
References
Index