Dear RDA-L subscribers,
I apologize to you for sending an internal JSC document to the RDA-L list.
Please ignore this message.
Judy Kuhagen
JSC Secretary
Dear JSC,
Because there are so many deadlines "floating around in emails," Gordon
agreed that I should send a listing of current deadlines. I'll update the
list via email as deadlines are added. The list below includes dates from
the 2013 meeting actions table plus dates assigned after the meeti
The follow-up documents listed below, based on discussions at the November
2013 JSC meeting, are available on the public website (
http://www.rda-jsc.org/workingnew.html):
6JSC/ISBD/Discussion/3/JSC response
6JSC/BL/13/LC follow-up
Regards, Judy Kuhagen
JSC Secretary
Bernhard said:
>RDA, to my knowledge, doesn't define the term, although why not?
>I mean, in the light of RDA's ambitions...
In light of RDA's ambitions to be used outside the bibliographic
world, there certainly needs to be better provisions for objects.
Museums for example could use 264 0 f
M. E. wrote:
> Don't confuse RDA's "production statement", which refers to man-made
> stuff, with what might be similar statements in another universe for
> naturally occurring objects.
>
Thinking this over, I should qualify that the production statement would
also apply to natural objects that
J. McRee Elrod wrote:
> Why would one wish to do that? Nobody has suggested 264 1 $bGod for a
> rock. All we need is 264 2 for the seller of the rock. Like
> manuscripts, equipment and naturally occurring objects are not
> published, and should have the appropriate 264 indicator for
> manufact
Someone pointed out to me off-list that $y 20th century cannot be directly
applied to headings for classes of persons. My apology for the error.
--Ben
Benjamin Abrahamse
Cataloging Coordinator
Acquisitions and Discovery Enhancement
MIT Libraries
617-253-7137
From: Resource Description and Acces
Benjamin
If I were writing the best practice guidelines, I’d be inclined to use
“Physics” and “Poetry” in 372; the Einstein Symposium is (I assume) concnered
with Einstein, and with Physics.
We’ve tried to give our cataloguers a bit of guidance on the use of LCSH in
NARs, in the BL Guide
I should add--I had no idea that Stevens and Einstein were born and died the
same year until after I wrote this email. And I picked those two names more or
less randomly.
Weird.
b
Benjamin Abrahamse
Cataloging Coordinator
Acquisitions and Discovery Enhancement
MIT Libraries
617-253-7137
From:
I wonder if a best practice in this situation would be--like we often do with
biographical material--to add a 372 $a referring to the class of person that
the individual represents as well?
[Made up examples:]
111 $a International Einstein Symposium
372 $a Einstein, Albert, 1879-1955 $2 naf
372
Dear Colleagues,
I would like to ask a question about GMD removing process from 245
responsibility area. We are using Millenium automation system and
couldn't success to remove the subfield *_|h[electronic resource]_*
statement.
Thank you in advance for your support and suggestions.
BR,
Did
Robert
I once asked a colleague at LC, what they thought about a person's name being
recorded as the field of activity for a conference about the person; the reply
was "Like you, I think it looks a little odd and probably is best handled by
subject headings, but I don't see anything that wou
Hello,
I'd like show us one Authority Record of our virtual library, where we are
using 372 Field of Activity and how the users see it in the web. Maybe, this
may seem simple because it isn't complicated, but for us is effective.
In this link you see it in differents formats
http://www.larram
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