|
LIBRARY CATALOGS
Return
to Table of Contents | Return
to Expanded Table of Contents
Once you have identified
materials that you need it will be essential to find the collections,
in this country and abroad, that will be most useful to your research.
It will also be important when writing grants to identify those materials
that are only available overseas. Library catalogs will be essential in
this step in your research.
Since their "migration"
to an electronic environment library catalogs have become deceptively
easy to use. They are deceptive in the sense that the researcher must
be aware when initiating a search what the catalog contains and if the
records are consistent in their format. That is, does the catalog include
all the libraries records or only those received in the library from a
particular date? Do all records include subject headings? In some catalogs,
like the one at the University of Illinois, the online catalog does have
records for all the items in the collection. However, millions of those
records have no subject headings. Does the library have uncataloged material
that might be of importance for your research? Many libraries had a practice
of not cataloging newspapers. Thus the researcher will often not find
holdings for titles like Pravda in an online catalog. Again,
this is the case at the University of Illinois for such titles as Moskovskiia
viedomosti, Pravda, Izviestia and several others.
Other practices that can confuse the issue include cataloging part of
a serial run, but not the entire title. Thus, Moskovskiia viedomosti
is displayed with only a few years of holdings in the University of
Illinois library catalog when in fact most issues for the 19th century
are available here.
There is also a long
standing problem with regard to library catalogs that every researcher
should keep in mind. It is particularly important in working with serial
publications. Many scholarly publications are issued by institutional
bodies such as pedagogical institutes, universities,
and academies of science. Such publications can be entered variously.
Thus, the Uchenye Zapiski of the Moskovskii Gosudarstvennyi
Pedagogicheskii Institut can appear in several formats:
Moscow. Gosudarsvennyi Pedagogicheskii Institut.
Uchenye Zapiski
Moscow. Moskovskii Gosudarstvennyi Pedagogicheskii
Institut. Uchenye Zapiski.
Moskovskii Gosudarstvennyi Pedagogicheskii Institut.
Uchenye Zapiski
Uchenye Zapiski (Moskovskii Gosudarstvennyi
Pedagogicheskii Institut)
Uchenye Zapiski Moskovskogo Gosudarstvennogo Pedagogicheskogo
Instituta.
The researcher would
be counting on cross-referencing to guide him/her through the catalog.
Unfortunately, such cross-references are not always available. This example
is included here simply to make the point that forms of entry vary widely
and when a title is not located under one heading all possibilities must
be pursued.
Another problem that
exists concerns the use of what are referred to as "union catalogs". These
are resources that include the holdings of several libraries. The best
known paper resource of this type is perhaps, the National
Union Catalog. Other titles of the same type include
the Slavic Cyrillic Union Catalog,
Union List of Serials, Serial
Publications of Foreign Governments, Newspapers in Microform.
Electronic resources of this type include RLIN
and OCLC, a.k.a. WorldCat.
In all cases the catalogs
are chronologically specific. That is, there are specific dates of coverage
included in these sources. Therefore, when the researcher is deciding
which catalog to use, the dates of publication for the material he is
seeking will be one of most important factors guiding his selection of
reference sources.
The online catalogs
were begun in the 1970s and frequently do not have records of older titles.
When you identify a library that has a number of items in your subject
area it is often useful to search that particular collection. The Slavic
Cyrillic Union Catalog/Cyrillic Union Catalog or the National Union
Catalog can be used to identify collections with substantial holdings
on a particular subject. However, it may not be easy to search the holdings
of individual libraries beyond the online catalog. This is because many
libraries did not have printed catalogs. To find the web addresses for
specific library online catalogs the following tools can be especially
helpful: lib-web-cats and lib-dex.
Once you have identified
the library that holds material, it is essential that you check whatever
information is avaialable at the library site to determine what the library
holds. Remember that the online catalog may only display a portion of
the library's collection.
Annotated Guide to Library Catalogs
Return
to Table of Contents | Return
to Expanded Table of Contents
|