I’ve done one somewhat like this—not very tidy—and perhaps
incorrectly:
010
n 2003080212 ǂz no2005069223
040
DLC ǂb eng ǂe rda ǂc DLC ǂd DLC ǂd PPi-MA
046
ǂf 1975
1000
KJ-52 ǂc (Rapper), ǂd 1975- [changed from KJ52
(Rapper)]
374
Rap musicians ǂ2 lcsh
375
male
4000
KJ52 ǂc (Rapper), ǂd 1975-
4001
Sorrentino, Jonah, ǂd 1975-
670
KJ52 (Rapper). 7th Avenue, p2000: ǂb label (KJ52)
670
His It's pronounced five two [SR] p2003: ǂb label (KJ-52)
670
Behind the musik, 2005: ǂb insert (KJ-52)
670
All music guide WWW site, 05-08-03 ǂb (KJ-52; b. Jonah Sorrentino; Christian
rapper)
670
U.S. copyright file, Dec. 19, 2012 ǂb (Sorrentino, Jonah Kirsten Carlin, 1975-
)
670
KJ-52 WWW site, Dec. 19, 2012 ǂb (KJ-52)
670
Facebook, Dec. 19, 2012 ǂb (KJ-52)
The reasoning was as follows: 9.19.1.2 says: Add to the name one or more of the following elements (in this order),
as applicable:
e) the profession or occupation (see 9.16) for a
person whose name consists of a phrase or appellation not conveying the idea of
a person.
Since
I also knew the birth date, I then added that.
9.19.1.1,
the general guidelines, has:
Make additions to the name as instructed at 9.19.1.2–9.19.1.6, in that
order, as applicable.
9.19.1.3, date, precedes 9.19.1.6, profession.
In
AACR2, I frequently constructed headings of this sort by using a birth date
only, assuming the presence of that would be enough to clarify that the name was
that of a person. In this case, KJ-52, $d 1975- is what I would have
done. Perhaps that approach could be used in RDA. It would avoid
making a decision on the order of these additions, but maybe it was wrong in
AACR2 to begin with (e.g., compared with the references in n 93086906, to
Shakur, Tupac … which have $c (Musician), $d 1971-1996) I cannot
find an example in RDA that includes both of these additions. I don’t
believe AACR2 has one either.
So, do the general guidelines take precedence over the specific case of
9.19.1.2:
KJ-52,
$d 1975- $c (Rapper)
Chuck
Herrold
Carnegie
Library of Pittsburgh
From:
Program for Cooperative Cataloging [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On
Behalf Of Moore, Richard
Sent: Monday, February 18, 2013 3:24
AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [PCCLIST] Order
of subfields in RDA NARs for personal names
Nancy
I
think the assumptions in your first paragraph are
correct.
Putting
$c (Spirit) after $d [date] feels right, because the entity is (putatively) the
spirit of the person who had those dates.
The
case with date and occupation is a new situation, and I'm not sure if there
are examples in the documentation, or precedents to follow. If we are
saying "there are two people called Ian Roberts, both born in 1952,
and one needs the additional qualifer Actor", then it's
probably correct to put the "additional"
qualifer afterwards:
Roberts,
Ian, $d 1952- $c (Actor)
I must
admit that I too would be tempted to omit the date from the access point
for the actor, if it was not already present, in the interests of
tidiness - though as you say, the PS suggests
otherwise.
Regards
Richard
_________________________
Richard
Moore
Authority
Control Team Manager
The
British Library
Tel.:
+44 (0)1937
546806
From: Program for
Cooperative Cataloging [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of
Nancy Sack
Sent: 16 February 2013 01:11
To:
[log in to unmask]
Subject: [PCCLIST] Order of subfields in RDA
NARs for personal names
Aloha,
We're hoping for some
clarification about the order of subfields in RDA NARs for personal names. Is it
correct that subfield $c follows subfield $d for cataloger additions--occupation
terms and also "Spirit"--that are recorded in parentheses but that subfield $c
precedes $d when we record terms considered part of the name (such as Jr. or
III) or associated titles (such as Countess), or--in the near future--terms of
address, honor, office, and rank (such as Sir, Captain, Rev.)? In other words,
does $c comes after $d when it contains parentheses but before $d when it does
not?
Here's a real-live example: We are updating and recoding NAR
no2009160736 (Roberts, Ian, $c actor). The year of birth is known (1952) but
another individual is already using the heading Roberts, Ian, $d 1952. Which of
these is correct?
Roberts, Ian, $d 1952- $c
(Actor)
Roberts, Ian $c (Actor), $d 1952-
Or is it
better not to record the date in the 100 field at all (in violation of the
LC-PCC PS at 9.19.1.3) and leave the heading with the unique string Roberts, Ian
$c (Actor)? After all, that's what the Phase 2 program would
do...
Thanks.
Nancy
--
Nancy Sack
Cataloging Department
University of Hawaii at Manoa
2550 McCarthy Mall
Honolulu, HI 96822
phone: 808-956-2648
fax: 808-956-5968
e-mail: [log in to unmask]
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