Tuesday 11 February 2014

Little Essays on the Rules (6) [Brackets] and ©Copyright



Philip Harvey

Bifurcation of our catalogues between RDA-style and AACR-style continues apace.  A Queensland colleague, Annette McGrath (Queensland Theological College), raised the question of the 264 $c field for publication date.

In a record she  downloaded, the information entered was [2013].  In the book itself, the information was clearly given as (c) 2013 and there were no other dates suggested, no reprints or editions. Annette found this “fairly straightforward.” Can anyone tell me, she asked, why it was catalogued with square brackets around the date? She thought square brackets were only used when the date is uncertain. What is going on?

Many, many RDA and other recent records are coming to us with [square brackets] around the publication date, even though the date is stated clearly in the book. In the old AACR Rules, these brackets were only used where no date of publication &c. appeared in the item. Rule 1.4F7 gave several examples of what to do, all of them using square brackets. That was the precedent and all such records pre-RDA stay as such in our catalogue, with square brackets to indicate the date is a calculated guess, or lifted from a source outside the text.

In the old days it was fair to assume that such a presentation may have been made by a cataloguer who did not have the book in front of them, e.g. in pre-publication cataloguing through an agency.

Further notices on e-lists helped explain why bifurcation is active and growing rapidly.

Rebecca Kemble (University of Canberra) weighed in, saying that the brackets are there because the 264 1 is for publication information only. If the book doesn’t specifically state the year that it was published, the cataloguer can use the copyright date but place square brackets around it to show that the date of publication has been inferred. Copyright dates should be put in the 264 4 $c field.

With Annette’s example, the actual publication date of the book has not been given, even though the copyright is 2013 and was no doubt published in 2013. This does seem to break with the convention that a book with a copyright date published in the same year it is being catalogued is, by an astounding process of rational thinking, the year of publication.

RDA’s desire to include the various kinds of dates in different subfields has turned this rather obvious dating process into a rule-bound nightmare. Because we cannot say with 100% certainty that a book with c2013 actually came out in 2013 (though most of them did) we must now place [square brackets] around every instance where only the c2013 is given.

This practice further confuses the average user of our catalogue, not to mention the advanced bibliographer, who will have a combination of AACR dates where the brackets mean one thing and RDA dates where they mean something else.

Whether such rules will compel publishers to state the date on the title page more often is one of those questions we meet in our dreams. Unequivocal expressions of exact date at all times are not the rule in publishing.

In RDA language, the copyright date is a supplied date. While in fact, in vast quantities of books, copyright is the only date from which to infer publication year. It is, however, in RDA terms, not a secure or final date. No wonder there are so many records coming through with square brackets surrounding the date. I do wonder if all those records have given the source in a note.

Since RDA was introduced I imagine a great deal of heat and light has been witnessed on Autocat and other cataloguing lists about this matter, possibly in about equal measure.

Impishly I added on one list, it’s still fun to receive the first book of the new year in the previous year. Brill of Leiden are particularly good at this game and I fully expect the first Brill 2015 book to arrive in about November 2014.




1 comment:

  1. Jenny Clarke gave me permission to send this email to the Comments Page. This is Jenny's response to the e-list dialogue about 264 conducted yestrday.

    Hi Philip

    You are so right about the heat and light... (and I think much more heat than light) being generated by this RDA ruling!
    Your summation is spot on.

    The root of the change is RDA's core element philosophy.

    In RDA the publication details are core (ie mandatory) and if the date is not explicitly a publication date then something
    must be supplied. (264 _1 $a $b $c).
    The date can be inferred by a © date with 100% accuracy, so it is bracketed without any question mark.
    RDA does not require a note to explain square brackets... so don't hold your breath looking for explanatory notes.

    If you don't have a "publication" date, but do have a copyright date, you are then required to go on to code a © date
    in its own field (264 _4 $a)

    The National Library of Australia has gone further and is providing the © date field even if they have a known publication
    date and it is the same as the copyright date. (LC isn't, they only code the copyright date if it differs from an explicit
    publication date). The NLA reasoning is that in years to come explicit © dates will be one of the main reasons people
    will still want authoritative catalogue records (for their law suits).

    To be even more arcane, if there is a comment anywhere in or on the text that the title is "published" that date can be used
    without square brackets.

    If you want even more heat, trawl through ACAT and the RDA fora on what constitutes "publication" .... currently I think the
    consensus is a print thesis is not published but the e-version on the institution website is
    .....but enough of all that, I must get back to work.

    Regards
    Jenny Clarke
    (who in her cataloguer's heart agrees with Philip but with her RDA trainer's face on defends RDA)
    Youthworks College and UNILINC

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