Title of article :
Metadata, Metaphor, and Metonymy
Author/Authors :
D. Grant Campbell، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
Principles drawn not just from library and information
science, but also from structuralist literary theory, provide the beginnings
of a flexible theoretical framework that will incorporate not just current
metadata activities but those in the future that cannot yet be envisioned. A
distinction common in literary studies is used here to distinguish between
metadata applications for discovery and metadata applications for use.
Metadata systems for resource discovery, such as the Dublin Core, are
continuous with the traditions of bibliographic description, and rely on a
principle of metonymy: the use of a surrogate or adjunct object to represent
another. Metadata systems for resource use, such as semantic markup
languages, are continuous with the traditions of database design, and rely
on a principle ofmetaphor: the use of a paradigmatic image or design that
conditions how the user will respond to and interact with the data. [Article
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© 2005 by The Haworth Press, Inc. All
rights reserved.]
Keywords :
Metadata , Cataloging , bibliographic description , literarydisplacement , synchrony , diachrony , Metaphor , metonymy , synechdoche
Journal title :
Cataloging and Classification Quarterly
Journal title :
Cataloging and Classification Quarterly