A Practical Guide to Library of Congress Subject Headings

Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH) is used by more libraries worldwide than any other controlled vocabulary system. Yet, many librarians and paraprofessional staff do not have any formal education or training in LCSH. They find themselves having to decipher or construct LCSH strings and don’t know where to begin.

Here’s a resource that uses language non-catalogers can understand and provides hands-on, user-friendly training in LCSH.

Here Karen Snow transfers her popular LCSH workshops and continuing education courses to book form for those who can’t attend her courses.

This book offers material on the basics of subject analysis, the importance of controlled vocabularies, and the main features and principles of LCSH. It explains and provides guidance on the application of LCSH. Library of Congress’ instruction manual for LCSH, the Subject Headings Manual, is discussed at length.

Several chapters concentrate on assigning LCSH to resources of a certain focus or genre: fiction works, biographical works (or works that focus heavily on a certain person or their works), and resources that emphasize a geographic location. A separate chapter on encoding subject information in the Machine-Readable Cataloging (MARC) standard will be particularly useful for library staff.

Most chapters contain exercises (with answers at the end of the book) that test a reader’s understanding of the chapter material and provide opportunities to practice applying LCSH and subdivisions.

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A Practical Guide to Library of Congress Subject Headings

Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH) is used by more libraries worldwide than any other controlled vocabulary system. Yet, many librarians and paraprofessional staff do not have any formal education or training in LCSH. They find themselves having to decipher or construct LCSH strings and don’t know where to begin.

Here’s a resource that uses language non-catalogers can understand and provides hands-on, user-friendly training in LCSH.

Here Karen Snow transfers her popular LCSH workshops and continuing education courses to book form for those who can’t attend her courses.

This book offers material on the basics of subject analysis, the importance of controlled vocabularies, and the main features and principles of LCSH. It explains and provides guidance on the application of LCSH. Library of Congress’ instruction manual for LCSH, the Subject Headings Manual, is discussed at length.

Several chapters concentrate on assigning LCSH to resources of a certain focus or genre: fiction works, biographical works (or works that focus heavily on a certain person or their works), and resources that emphasize a geographic location. A separate chapter on encoding subject information in the Machine-Readable Cataloging (MARC) standard will be particularly useful for library staff.

Most chapters contain exercises (with answers at the end of the book) that test a reader’s understanding of the chapter material and provide opportunities to practice applying LCSH and subdivisions.

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A Practical Guide to Library of Congress Subject Headings

A Practical Guide to Library of Congress Subject Headings

by Karen Snow
A Practical Guide to Library of Congress Subject Headings

A Practical Guide to Library of Congress Subject Headings

by Karen Snow

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Overview

Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH) is used by more libraries worldwide than any other controlled vocabulary system. Yet, many librarians and paraprofessional staff do not have any formal education or training in LCSH. They find themselves having to decipher or construct LCSH strings and don’t know where to begin.

Here’s a resource that uses language non-catalogers can understand and provides hands-on, user-friendly training in LCSH.

Here Karen Snow transfers her popular LCSH workshops and continuing education courses to book form for those who can’t attend her courses.

This book offers material on the basics of subject analysis, the importance of controlled vocabularies, and the main features and principles of LCSH. It explains and provides guidance on the application of LCSH. Library of Congress’ instruction manual for LCSH, the Subject Headings Manual, is discussed at length.

Several chapters concentrate on assigning LCSH to resources of a certain focus or genre: fiction works, biographical works (or works that focus heavily on a certain person or their works), and resources that emphasize a geographic location. A separate chapter on encoding subject information in the Machine-Readable Cataloging (MARC) standard will be particularly useful for library staff.

Most chapters contain exercises (with answers at the end of the book) that test a reader’s understanding of the chapter material and provide opportunities to practice applying LCSH and subdivisions.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781538143018
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 07/28/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 182
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Karen Snow is an associate professor and PhD program director in the School of Information Studies at Dominican University, River Forest, Illinois. She teaches cataloging, classification, and metadata courses and has written many journal articles on cataloging topics and cataloging education. She is the author of A Practical Guide to Library of Congress Classification published in 2017.

Snow holds a Master’s degree in library science and a PhD in information science from the University of North Texas (UNT), where she cataloged for UNT’s main library, the Rare Book Room, and the University Archives.

Snow has taught many LCSH workshops to continuing education groups and teaches LCSH in her courses at Dominican.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

Preface

Chapter 1 - Library of Congress Subject Headings in a Nutshell

Chapter 2 - Basic Principles of Subject Analysis

Chapter 3 - Searching and Browsing LCSH in Classification Web

Chapter 4 - Subdivisions and Free-Floating Subdivisions

Chapter 5 - MARC Coding of LCSH

Chapter 6 - The Subject Headings Manual (SHM)

Chapter 7 - Geographic Subject Headings and Subdivisions

Chapter 8 - Personal Name Subject Headings and Biographies

Chapter 9 - Fiction

Chapter 10 - Conclusion; LCSH Resources

Appendix A: Answers to End-of-Chapter Exercises

Appendix B: Free-Floating Subdivisions: Form and Topical

Appendix C: Free-Floating Subdivisions: Names of Places

Appendix D: Free-Floating Subdivisions: Names of Persons

Glossary

Index

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