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Bibliographies (2)

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Bibliographies Prepared by: Jane L. Garay
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Page 1: Bibliographies (2)

Bibliographies

Prepared by:Jane L. Garay

Page 2: Bibliographies (2)

What is a Bibliography?

Derived from two Greek words, “biblion” meaning book and “graphein” meaning to write or the writing of books.

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The history, identification, or description of writings or publications.

A list of works written by an author or printed by a publishing house.

It is the name given to a list of books, manuscripts, and other publications, systematically described and arranged, which have some relationship to each other.

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Three Basic Purposes

To Identify and verify information

To locate materials

To select materials for the collection

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Types of Bibliography

A. Systematic Enumerative Bibliography

B. Current Selection Aids

C. Bibliography of Bibiliographies

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A. Systematic Enumerative Bibliography

Type of bibliography which refers to a list of books, film or recordings.

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1. Universal BibliographyIncludes everything, published, issued or printed in the fields of communication from the beginning, through the present to the future.

Conrad Gesner, known as the Father of Universal Bibliography.Biblioteca Universalis (1543)

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Conrad Gesner, known as the Father of Universal Bibliography.

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Biblioteca Universalis (1543)   It was the first truly comprehensive "universal" listing of all the books of the first century of printing. It was an alphabeticalbibliography that listed all the known books printed in Latin, Greek, or Hebrew.

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2. National and Trade Bibliographies

a. National Bibliography -published by

government

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Two basic requirements:

Legal Deposit System- law that requires a library to received a copy.

The record must be fromdirect examination of materials.

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Examples:Canadiana- CANMAGeneral Catalogue of Printed Books(Published by the British Library)

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Philippine National Library (PNB)

Published quarterly by TNL with annual cumulationIssued in two parts since 1985: I. Books, music scores, gov publications, periodicals, conference proceedings II These and dissertations.

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b. National Library Catalog

A list of all the works cataloged by a national library and other member libraries and includes items not published in the country of origin.

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Example:National Union Catalog (NUC) of the LC

Issued in microfiche in 1983Online version is MARC and

can be accessed through DIALOG.

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c. Trade Bibliographies

List commercial publications to aid in the selection and acquisition recently published materials, specifically trade books.

Information is gathered rom the published materials, specifically trade books.

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Examples:Book in Print ( R.R. Bowker of New York) 1948 to date

Can be accessed:PrintedOnline through database vendors e.g. DIALOGCD-ROM =Books in print with Book Reviews Plus (searchable by author, title, topic, publisher, ISBN, date of publication, and grade level)Microfiche

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3. Subject BibliographyList materials that

relate to a particular topic. It is intended to research workers and other in special areas.

Examples:Blazek, Ron and Elizabeth Aversa. The Humanities: A Selective Guide to Information Sources.

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4. Guide to Reference MaterialsIncludes the best works for a

given situation or audience.

Guides to a reference books, special reading, list by a library and items devoted to the best works of a particular group of people.

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Examples:

Guide to Reference Books compiled by Eugene P. Sheehy (Chicago:ALA)Concentrates in American, Canadian, and some British titles divided into 5 major areas.

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Guide to Reference Materials edited by Albert J. Walford (London:ALA)Strong in British and European titles.

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5. Analytical and textual bibliography

Analytical- concerned with the physical description of books.

Textual- highlights certain textual variations between a manuscript and the printed book.

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6. Daily Use

Directs the individual to an item and is primarily used to find a specific book or article.

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B. Current Selection Aids

Examples:Choice. Chicago:ALA, 1964 to date. Issued monthly

Evaluates a number of reference titles of value to all libraries.

Reference and Research Book News.Portland, OR: Book News. 1985 to date. Monthly.

Provides full bibliographic information and a short descriptive annotation.

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C. Bibliography of Bibliographies

A listing of bibliographies that were created as a means of bibliographic control.

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Examples:Bibliographic Index: A Cumulative Bibliography of Bibliographies by H.W. Wilson, 1937 to date.

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A World Bibliography of Bibliographies and of Bibliographical Catalogues, Calendars, Abstracts, Digests, Indexes, and the like or Besterman by Theodore Besterman. Laussanne: Societas Bibliographica, 1965-1966, 4v.

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Bibliography of Philippine Bibliographies

Retana says that this is the most complete bibliography that has been compiled of printing in the Philippines

Written by:Gabriel Adriano Bernardo

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Bibliographies for Non-Print Materials.

Video Source Book. Detroit:Gale Research. 1978 to date. Annual with two supplements.

A listing of about 60, 000 video programs on videotapes and disks.Arranged alphabetically by title

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Guide to Microforms in Print. New York: Bowker-Saur, 1961 to date.

List alphabetically by author and title.

Considers sixteen diff. types of microform.

The subject guide uses the LCSH

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Bibliographies for Periodicals and Newspapers

Ulrich’s International Periodicals Directory. R.R. Bowker, 1932 to date.

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Ulrich’s International Periodicals Directory. R.R. Bowker, 1932 to date.A guide to currently available periodicals (about 120,000)

Arranged under 600 broad subject headings with a title index.

Since 1988, it incorporated the Irregular Serials and Annuals thus providing publication and ordering information for most directories, almanacs, and yearbooks.

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The Standard Periodical Directory. New York: Oxbridge Communications. 1964 to date. Biannual.

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The Standard Periodical Directory. New York: Oxbridge Communications. 1964 to date. Biannual.List about 75, 000 periodical titles in the US and Canada, inluding consumer and special interest magazine, newsletter, house organs, directories, gov. publication, bulletins, yearbooks, and religious association publications.

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Current and Retrospective Bibliographies

Current BibliographyLists books or other items close to the time at which they are being published.

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Examples:

Cumulative Book Index. New York: Wilson, 1898 to date. Monthly except August.An author title-title-subject international list of books published in the English LanguageProvides author full name, complete title, edition, series no. of pages, publisher, date of publication, price, LC Card Number, ISBN.Can be accessed online through Wilsonline; CD-ROM version is accessible through Wilson Disc

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Cumulative Book Index. New York: Wilson, 1898 to date. Monthly except August.

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American Book Publishing Record (Bowker), 1961 to date. Monthly.

Provides complete cataloging, records for books as they are published.Excludes gov. publications, subscriptions of books, pamphlets under 49 pages, and dissertationsArrangement is by DDC, with author and title index.

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American Book Publishing Record (Bowker), 1961 to date. Monthly.

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Retrospective Bibliography

Covers materials published during an earlier time period.

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Examples:

Evans, Charles. American Bibliography. Chicago: Evans. 1903-1934. 14 volumes.List books, pamphlets, and periodicals published in the US from 1903-1934. 14 vol. Titles are arranged in chronological order by date of publication.Indexes to authors, printers, and publishers are given.

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Evans, Charles. American Bibliography. Chicago: Evans. 1903-1934. 14 volumes.

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Bibliotheca Americana by Joseph SabinList boks relating to to the US from its European discovery (October 12, 1942) to 1968. Provides complete bibliographic description and locations of copies as well as references to reviews.

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Guides to Databases

Covers bibliographies available electronically.

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Examples:Gale Directory of Databases. Detroit: Gale, 1993-. 2 volumes. Semi-annual.Contains about 6000 entries arranged alphabetically by database name.

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Examples:Gale Directory of Databases. Detroit: Gale, 1993-. 2 volumes. Semi-annual.The CD-ROM Directory. London:TFPL, 1986-. Annual.

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La Imprenta en Manila desde sus origines hasta 1810 (1896).Jose Toribio Medina, a Chilean bibliographer listed 565 titlesOf this number, 526 titles are dated, 15 have no dates and 24 are of doubtful origin.

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CD-ROMa high-capacity read only optical disk that is intended for database publishing and distribution.

Access to Bibliographic Sources

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BibliofileA MARC database management utility produced by the Library Corporation.Provide acess to catalog records by main entry, title, ISBN or ISSN, and LC card no.

Examples:

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CD-MARC Bibliographic- a CD-ROM implementation of the LC MARC DatabaseLaserQuest from General Research CorporationSuperCat from Gaylord Research CorporationCD-CATSS (Catalog Support System) from UtlasCAT CD450 from OCLCAlliance Plus from Follett Software

Examples:

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Is a large database for shared cataloging information created by the combined efforts of large libraries.

Bibliographic Utility

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OCLC (Online Computer Library Center)Formerly Ohio College Library

CenterThe largest bibliographic utility

RLIN (Research Libraries Information Network)

Started in 1967 at Stanford University

Examples:

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1. Rapid location of a book, article, document, etc.

2. Acquisition of materials through either direct/indirect file use.

3. Circulation control and remote catalog access.

4. Shared cataloging5. Online access to LC Name Authority

File6. Answering bibliographic verification

and location queries.

Functions of Bibliographic Utilities

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1. All bibliographical entries must be in accord with the purpose of the research paper.

2. All entries should be accurate, logical and clear.

3. The bibliographical form which is prescribed for a given paper must be followed consistently in every entry.

Principles in Compiling Bibliographies

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1. A bibliography must be classified and divided into sections, usually by type of material, unless it is very short.

2. The variety of source of materials may sometimes call for further subdivision of the main classes, e.g. Primary sources may be divided into “Published” and “Unpublished” works.

3. Entries should be arranged in a definite order within the division.

4. The bibliography of a paper is single-spaced with one blank space between entries. The first line of each entry is flush left, and all subsequent lines, if any, ate indented five spaces.

Guidelines in Compiling Bibliographies

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5. Give the author’s full name in the inverted order.

6. If there are two or more authors, only the first author’s name is inverted from while the succeeding names are transcribed in natural order.

7. Full stops are used in bibliographical entries, at the end of each main part.

Bibliographical references to periodicals, however, retain the parenthesis around the dates of publication when these follow volume number.

8. Page numbers are listed in bibliographical entries when the main item is part of a whole work.

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When given, page no. must be inclusive (first and the last page of the cited section). When an article is continued at the back of the journal, only the first page is to be given.

9. Bibliographies are arranged alphabetically by author’s family name, letter by letter.

10. In a succession of works by the same author, the name given for the first entry and an eight space line succeeding with a period takes place in subsequent entries.

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The End ..THANK YOU!!


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