Proposal for labeling DCRM rules
JAIN FLETCHER
dcrb-l@lib.byu.edu
Thu, 26 Aug 1999 08:22:09 -0700 (Pacific Daylight Time)
Hello all,
Now for something completely different. I want to discuss further
my ideas about the labeling of the DCRM rules. This came up in some of
the music task group's preliminary discussion. We wondered if the
rules we were making were going to exist as an entity unto itself (as,
say, the MLA's Sheet Music Guidelines), or part of a larger whole (as
AACR). We see AACR as a good model, with its introduction, its overall
rules (Ch. 1), its separately numbered chapters for each kind of
format, its rules on abbreviations, numbering, its glossary and its
index. We see this model as having too many advantages not to
advocate that we go with it for DCRM. The best reason for this is that
we could avoid a certain amount of duplication of effort. As we know,
most of the chapters of AACR2 are not as long as Ch. 1, because Ch. 1
states the fundamental rules, then the rest of the chapters zero in on
how those rules fit the format. (Of course, DCRB doesn't have anything
equivalent to this-only the rules for books. Still, I believe it would
be possible for these to act in the same way for DCRM as Ch. 1 does in
AACR.)
The Music Task Group has already decided that its rules are going
to need an introduction and a glossary. In the case of the glossary,
it would be good simply to add our words to a whole (added along with
the special terms for serials, maps, etc.) This would avoid having to
repeat certain terms from other existing glossaries in ours (not to
mention, avoiding having 4 separate glossaries for DCRM). As to our
own introduction, we would need to see how everyone else's
introductions are looking to decide whether the introduction we are
writing can be incorporated into a single one for all the formats or
whether the "chapter" we are writing should have its own.
In advocating that the separate rules in DCRM be considered
"chapters" a la AACR2, the next obvious question is how to distinguish
those chapters. We could number them, but if done consecutively (e.g.,
Ch.1 - books, Ch. 2 - serials, Ch. 3 - maps, Ch. 4 - music), the
numbering would not correlate to AACR2 and this could be confusing to
people using both sets of rules. A way of avoiding this is to adopt
AACR's chapter numbering (e.g., Ch. 2 - books, Ch. 3 - maps, Ch. 5 -
music, Ch. 12 - serials). This would have the advantage of correlating
to AACR, but would be awfully silly-looking by itself. To avoid all of
this, we believe that the best way to distinguish the chapters would be
to use the ISBD designation for the format as the chapter headings
(i.e., monographs, cartographic materials, printed music, serials).
The rules themselves would be preceded by the acronyms for these
formats, would proceed to the number for the "area" designation, a
capital letter for subsections of the areas and finally, consecutive
numbering for the rules within each area and subsection (in other
words, exactly like AACR, with the exception of the way in which those
are preceded: with chapter numberings). We have already begun this for
the music chapter (PM1A1, PM4C3, PM5B15). Whenever referring to the
rules as a whole, the chapters would also be distinguished with the
acronym (e.g., DCRM(M), DCRM(CM), DCRM(PM), DCRM(S)).
We have already found these distinguishing labels to be valuable.
For one, the Music Task Group is referring to existing rules and rule
interpretations, in order to be sure that we aren't proposing anything
contradictory to them. These include AACR2, Ch. 5, the LCRIs, the
Music Cataloging Decisions (MCD), the Sheet Music Guidelines (SMG), not
to mention DCRB itself for the invaluable foundation it has given us.
We are also looking at the Serials draft to see how they have solved
certain issues. Having a way to distinguish among them concisely in
our communications has been exceedingly useful. This will only become
a larger problem when these rules are finalized and "the world" starts
using them. But to mention one quite practical issue, when we advocate
specifying the rules used in the 040 $b of our bib record, don't we
want to make it quite clear the format we've followed (e.g., $b
dcrm(pm))? I see a great potential value in this. In addition, it
looks as though this idea is going to become more of a possibility for
AACR3, as well, if I understood correctly what John Attig was saying at
our meeting this summer. In fact, I have already noticed this for
electronic resources: we've been asked on listservs to review ISBD(ER),
but haven't I also noticed some people referring to AACR3(ER), as well?
Please think about this proposal carefully. It may seem early to
come to this kind of decision, but I don't think so, given that we've
found it valuable to use the designation already.
Thanks, Jain
Jain Fletcher
Head, Monographic Cataloging Section
Research Library - UCLA