Title of article
All New Subject Access to Fiction: How a Cultural Zeitgeist with Gray Hair Informed ALA’s Guidelines . . .
Author/Authors
Christopher Miller، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
10
From page
89
To page
98
Abstract
In 1990, the American Library Association published its
Guidelines on Subject Access to Individual Works of Fiction, Drama, Etc.
Neither the 1990 Guidelines nor the work’s subsequent 2000 edition is terribly
concerned with explaining why increased subject access to works of
imaginative literature has come to be needed now more than in the baker’s
century after Cutter first allowed for such access. Inherent to the 1990
Guidelines is the notion that works of imagination have a value such that
they deserve to be accessed in more or less the same manner that nonfiction
works are accessed, through aboutness as well as whatness. The paper
purports that the origins of this change in cataloging policy are far from
humble, that they can in fact be located in a broad swath of social historiography
and literary criticism. [Article copies available for a fee from The Haworth
Document Delivery Service: 1-800-HAWORTH. E-mail address: Website: © 2003 by The Haworth
Press, Inc. All rights reserved.]
Keywords
Social history , Subject heading access , Fiction
Journal title
Cataloging and Classification Quarterly
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Cataloging and Classification Quarterly
Record number
845307
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