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Hello everyone,

 

I have just gone over the entire exchange on the question I brought up about Las Negras, a short story collection by Yolanda Arroyo Pizarro which came out in 2012 with three stories and in 2016 with one more, rather brief story.  (The 2012 edition has PCC record 2012552039, and I’ve just made OCLC #962971781 for the 2016 edition.)

 

My main question was:  Is this a new work or a new expression?

 

But inevitably a question also arose whether the preferred title, for either edition, should be the title proper of the manifestastion(s) or a conventional collective title.  That got discussed at length and we all had a good time.

 

So now that I have made a record I thought I would tell you what I’ve done and invite corrections, if you are interested.

 

Stephen Hearn thinks the 2016 edition is a new expression, not a new work, so I’ve treated it that way. 

 

And, since the collection has been published twice, although in slightly different form, I decided that the title proper “Las Negras” is “established” enough to be the preferred title and a conventional collective title is not necessary.  Robert Maxwell says such decisions should be up to cataloger’s judgment, and that’s my judgment.  (The collection seems conceived as a whole, with the fourth one added later as a sort of coda, though I haven’t got any explicit evidence of that.)

 

And finally, I decided that it is worth making an AAP for the new expression, as provided for by 6.27.1.5 when the cataloger considers it important.  The only decent qualifier is the year, so the new expression of Las Negras gets this 240:

 

Negras. $f 2016

 

With some encouragement I will code this as PCC and make an expression authority record.

 

Thanks for the help! 

 

Pete Wilson

Vanderbilt University

 

 

 

 

From: Program for Cooperative Cataloging [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Stephen Hearn
Sent: Thursday, October 27, 2016 3:08 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [PCCLIST] When one compilation-work becomes a different one

 

In the LC NACO authority file, two titles have been established under "Arroyo Pizarro, Yolanda" which widen the range of AAP possibilities to three:

 

Arroyo Pizarro, Yolanda. $t Short stories. $k Selections -- with 400s for three separate titles of earlier collections.

 

Arroyo Pizarro, Yolanda. $t Short stories. $k Selections (Golpes de gracia) -- the title of a fourth story collection, not included among the 400s above.

 

Arroyo Pizarro, Yolanda. $t Negras  -- Pete Wilson's case, another short story collection entered this time under its own title in existing bib records.

 

How can we make sense of this? One step is to understand that ".. $t Short stories. $k Selections" and "...$t Negras" are AAPs for different things. The first has been used to name several short story collections collectively, not one.  The third option names a particular collection only as a work.  The middle option tries to have it both ways, borrowing the collective AAP and adding a qualifier title to make it particular.

 

Since we don't as a general rule insert a conventional collective title between an author and a work title (i.e., we don't use "Shakespeare, ... $t Plays. $k Selections (King Lear)"), the middle option seems dubious.  It also seems dubious to suppose that the first option represents only the three compilations which its 400s name and not Golpes de gracia.  Either a resource has a particular work title or it doesn't. If it has one, it doesn't need the conventional collective title.  If a compilation doesn't have a particular distinctive title, then any qualifying information added to make a conventional collective title specific should come from somewhere else.

 

So the question becomes, can a compilation have a particular work title? RDA 6.2.2.10.3's Alternative instruction says, "When identifying two or more works in a compilation, identify the parts collectively by recording a conventional collective title (see 6.2.2.10.1 or 6.2.2.10.2, as applicable), followed by Selections. Apply this instruction instead of or in addition to recording the preferred title for each of the works in the compilation." The LC-PCC PS for this instruction adds, "Give an authorized access point for the first or predominant work."

 

This is generally taken as applying to the name of the compilation; but that's not really what the instruction says.  The conventional collective title is meant as a replacement for separately identifying the parts of a compilation with AAPs, not as a name for the compilation itself.  A strict application of the 6.2.2.10.3 alternative instruction and LC-PCC PS would look something like this:

 

100 1   $a Arroyo Pizarro, Yolanda.

240 10 $a Negras

245 14 $a Las negras / $c ...

505 0   $a Wanwe -- Matronas -- Saetas.

700 12 $a Arroyo Pizarro, Yolanda. $t Short stories. $k Selections.

700 12 $a Arroyo Pizarro, Yolanda. $t Wanwe.

 

As for the compilation, RDA 6.2.2.8, Recording the Preferred Title for a Work, says, "This instruction applies to individual works and to compilations of works.

Record the title chosen as the preferred title for a work by applying the basic instructions at 6.2.1."  RDA 6.2.1.1 defines the title of the work as "A word, character, or group of words and/or characters by which a work is known."  The instruction at 6.2.2.4, Works Created after 1500, says to "choose as the preferred title the title or form of title in the original language by which the work is commonly identified either through use in resources embodying the work or in reference sources."  In this case, "Negras" is the title in the original language by which the compilation work is commonly identified through use in resources embodying the work; so "Negras" is the preferred title.

 

The important thing is that RDA does not impose a choice between "Negras" and a conventional collective title.  Both are appropriate as part of the resource description, since they signify different things--the name of the compilation vs. an alternative to enumerating the contents of the compilation with separate AAPs.

 

And yes, I know this is a novel reading of RDA, and suspect that I've missed some important instruction that will easily unravel everything I've said; but before that happens, look again at the brave little record up there. Wouldn't this be a better way to handle compilations with distinctive titles?

 

I'd answer Pete's original question about whether the addition of a story to a later edition of "Negras" constitutes a new work in the negative, preferring "expanded as (expression)" to clarify the relationship between the original three-story expression and the later expanded four-story one. One source I saw for the latter called it a second edition, which aligns with treating it as an expression.  This may also reflect differences in the way the term "work" is valued. I generally prefer to see a creator's production defined as fewer works and more expressions, based on a sense that this sort of analysis concentrates the work entities and thereby enhances their value. Treating a resource which adds relatively little to an existing work as a new work has the effect of diluting the significance of the work designation.  But that's an argument more from sentiment than from reason.

 

Stephen 

 

 

 

On Thu, Oct 27, 2016 at 12:17 PM, Wilson, Pete <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

Hello cataloging friends,

 

I have a question about when one work becomes another.

 

Please see LCCN 2012552039 (OCLC #809833452).  This is the record for a collection of three apparently related short stories by Yolanda Arroyo Pizarro, published in 2012, with title Las negras.  The cataloger chose not to use a conventional collective title to identify the compilation work, which seems reasonable to me.  The title proper is serving as the preferred title for the work.

 

Now I have an edition of the book published in 2016 with one (rather brief) additional story.  It’s called “Edicion aumentada” on the title page verso.

 

Is this a new work, or a new expression of the original work?  It seems to me that the work-to-work relationship designator “Expanded version of (work)” applies perfectly to this situation.  But how much expansion does there have to be?  The previously published part of the new book, plus some introductory material, takes up 130 pages and the new story just 10.

 

If it’s a new work, then I guess I should follow the decision of the cataloger of the original work and use the title proper as my preferred title, qualifying it probably by year.

 

I suspect there is published guidance that I am missing.  Please lead me to it!

 

Thanks!

 

Pete Wilson

Vanderbilt University

 

 

 

 



 

--

Stephen Hearn, Metadata Strategist

Data Management & Access, University Libraries

University of Minnesota

160 Wilson Library

309 19th Avenue South

Minneapolis, MN 55455

Ph: 612-625-2328

Fx: 612-625-3428

ORCID:  0000-0002-3590-1242