A few comments on this very interesting thread.


In MARC date qualifiers are ambiguous between works and expressions. Always
sticking dates in $f with the old-style punctuation perpetuates this
ambiguity. The problem affects not only conventional  collective titles,
but potentially also any work or expression authorized access point that
needs to be differentiated. We need a new set of conventions for
punctuation and/or subfielding, perhaps even a redefinition of the MARC
subfields, to get around this problem. For example, I've seen it proposed
that for works we give date qualifiers in parentheses without separating
them into another subfield. But I don't know if there is a consensus about
this.



(I know there is some debate about whether it is feasible to retrofit
existing bib records with RDA work and expression AAPs at this date, and
whether constructing unique AAPs is indeed the way we should be trying to
differentiate works and expressions. Those are good questions. But if we
are in fact going to do RDA in MARC, we will need to clarify our practices.)



I agree with Kevin Randall that a compilation, like any other work, is best
identified by the title it is published with (or rather an AAP based on
same). Even if by some misfortune it fails to become known by that title,
it's hard to see that the solution is to catalogue it with a title no
ordinary user would know it by.



I agree also with Robert Maxwell that compilations purporting to be the
complete works of a single author are (usually) best treated as the same
aggregate work. It's probably worth pointing out, however, that the NACO
Module 6 training materials for works and expressions currently reflect a
different position.



--

Chew Chiat Naun

Director, Cataloging & Metadata Services

110D Olin Library

Cornell University

(607) 254 8031






On 16 December 2013 07:18, Adam Schiff <asch...@u.washington.edu> wrote:

> They are considered separate compilation works, assuming that they have
> different contents.  The PCC NACO training says to add additional work
> element (date, place of origin, or other distinguishing characteristic) to
> the conventional collective title.  The date is probably NOT the best thing
> to add, although it's one option.  Many NACO libraries are adding the title
> proper of the collection instead, since it may better aid in
> identification, for example:
>
> X. Poems. Selections (Best of X's poetry)
>
> Some catalogers are not happy with this practice, and would prefer to
> consider the title of the compilation to be the preferred title by which
> the compilation is known.  LC's policy, however, implies that the compiled
> work does not become known by its title except through the passage of time
> (e.g. Whitman's Leaves of Grass), and that for newly published compiled
> works, a conventional collective title must be used instead.
>
> Incidentally, although the RDA instructions do seem to be clear that the
> date would be added in parentheses as you have done, in practice in MARC
> these are being added in subfield $f following a period:
>
> X. $t Poems. $k Selections. $f 2010
>
> Adam Schiff
> Principal Cataloger
> University of Washington Libraries
>
> -----Original Message----- From: Heidrun Wiesenmüller
> Sent: Monday, December 16, 2013 12:41 AM
>
> To: RDA-L@LISTSERV.LAC-BAC.GC.CA
> Subject: [RDA-L] 6.2.2.10 and 6.27.1.9
>
> I am uncertain about the relationship of 6.2.2.10 (Recording the
> Preferred Title for a Compilation of Works of One Person, Family, or
> Corporate Body) and  6.27.1.9 (Additions to Access Points Representing
> Works) - both in theory and in practice.
>
> If I've got two different collections of works of the same creator, e.g.:
> "Selected poems / X"
> "Best of X's poetry"
> Both get the collective title "Poems. Selections" according to 6.2.2.10.2.
>
> But for the AAP, am I now supposed to add some additional attribute
> according to 6.27.1.9, e.g.:
> X. Poems. Selections (1995)
> X. Poems. Selections (2010)
>
> In short, my question is whether RDA considers the two different poetry
> collections as two different works (which must then be distinguished in
> the AAP) or as the same work (then, of course, no additional attribute
> would be necessary in the AAP).
>
> I'm also interested in the general practice. I know that LC used to add
> dates (at least in the case of complete works and selected works), but
> that this practice has now been abandoned. So I assume that LC now never
> distinguishes between different collections of the same type. What do
> others do?
>
> Heidrun
>
> --
> ---------------------
> Prof. Heidrun Wiesenmueller M.A.
> Stuttgart Media University
> Wolframstr. 32, 70191 Stuttgart, Germany
> www.hdm-stuttgart.de/bi
>
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