ALCTS CaMMS Cataloging & Classification Research Interest Group at ALA
Annual San Francisco

Date:  Sunday, June 28, 2015

Time: 10:30 am - 11:30 am

Location: MCC-120 (N) Moscone Convention Center

 

In this year's meeting, the CaMMS Cataloging and Classification Research
Interest Group offers two presentations and discussions of
cataloging-related research and projects.

 

In this session we will be looking at RDA outside of its usual context. In
our first presentation we will look at RDA in relationship to non-MARC
metadata and cataloging standards such as Dublin Core and MODS, and in the
second, we will consider LC-PCC's interpretation of RDA's instructions on
recording gender (RDA 9.7) through the lens of feminist and queer theory.

 

"Accommodating RDA in CONTENTdm and Islandora, or, Accommodating RDA in
Content and Digital Asset Management Systems," presented by Sai Deng,
Metadata Librarian and Associate Librarian, University of Central Florida

The Resource Description and Access (RDA) standard has been widely
implemented in integrated library systems and its application with MARC has
long been discussed, but its applicability in content and digital asset
management systems and with non-MARC standards hasn't been much addressed.
The national RDA non-MARC tests found that it is not easy to evaluate RDA
"without an application available to aptly manage and display the data,"
however, to accommodate RDA in existing content and digital asset management
systems still remains an issue. This presentation will address how RDA has
been applied in cataloging and migrating digital materials in CONTENTdm and
Islandora at the University of Central Florida Libraries. It will also look
at using RDA with other cataloging and metadata standards such as Dublin
Core (DC), Metadata Object Description Schema (MODS) and Describing
Archives: A Content Standard (DACS) to catalog digital materials including
digitized serials and monographs. 

 

"Queering the LCNAF : on recording gender in name authority files,"
presented by Amber Billey, Catalog/Metadata Librarian, University of Vermont
and Emily Drabinski, Coordinator of Library Instruction, Long Island
University

Library of Congress (LC) and the Program for Cooperative Cataloging (PCC)
interpretation of Resource Description and Access (RDA) rule 9.7 regarding
gender when identifying persons reinforces regressive conceptions of gender
identity. The rule instructs catalogers to record gender when identifying
persons, and although RDA gives catalogers the flexibility to record more
than two gender labels, LC limits Name Authority Cooperative Program (NACO)
catalogers to a binary label: male, female, or not known. In this
presentation, the presenters will expand on their award winning article,
(2014) What's Gender Got to Do with It? A Critique of RDA 9.7, Cataloging &
Classification Quarterly, 52:4, 412-421, DOI: 10.1080/01639374.2014.882465.
The presenters will briefly explore the objections raised by feminist and
queer theory to the current naming rule and offer a range of strategies for
practically challenging gender as a descriptive attribute for personal
names. At the local level, catalogers should consider whether gender ought
to be coded at all. At the policy level, catalogers can and should challenge
rules that have the potential to misrepresent creator identities and cause
damaging inaccuracies in name authority files.

 

CCRIG Co-Chair 2014/15

Rachel Jaffe

Metadata Librarian

University of California, Santa Cruz

Santa Cruz, CA

[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]%3cmailto:[email protected]> 

 

CCRIG Co-Chair 2014/15

Enerel Dambiinyam

Cataloging Librarian 

Middle Tennessee State University 

Murfreesboro, TN 

[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]%3cmailto:[email protected]> 

 

CCRIG Vice-Chair 2014/15

Wendy West

Head of Catalog Management Services

University at Albany, SUNY

Albany, NY

[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]%3cmailto:[email protected]> 

 

 

 

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