I don’t see a reply yet to your question, so I would like to share some thoughts.
In the case of Plato’s cave, you are dealing with a concept, it would seem, not a specific passage in Plato, which is why it was established as a subject. In your case, you have a specific passage in Plato,
and so your options would seem to be Plato. ǂt Republic. ǂn Book 10, lines 614-621 or Plato. $t Myth of Er, with a cross reference in
the authority record to the form not chosen. I am not sure which would be best in this case, but whichever you choose, it should still go in the NAF, I think.
Michael S. Borries
Cataloger, City University of New York
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New York, NY 10010
Phone: (646) 312-1687
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From: Program for Cooperative Cataloging [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
On Behalf Of Stephen Arnold
Sent: Monday, February 13, 2017 5:18 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [PCCLIST] Myth of Er
Dear list readers,
We have “Plato's Republic: the myth of Er” to catalog .
Wikipedia says of the myth
The Myth of Er is
a legend that concludes Plato's Republic (10.614–10.621).
The story includes an account of the
cosmos and the afterlife that greatly influenced religious, philosophical, and scientific thought for many centuries.
For subject access, is the better approach to treat it as a portion of text and (on the lines of eg. no2013118439),
set it up as Plato. ǂt Republic. ǂn Book 10, lines 614-621
or, on the other hand, is it closer to this below and should we be submitting it as an LCSH proposal?
010 sh 85103329
040 DLC ǂb eng ǂc DLC ǂd DLC
053 0B398.C34
150 Plato's cave (Allegory)
450 Allegory of the cave
450 Cave (Allegory)
450 Myth of the cave (Allegory)
550 Allegories ǂw g
Thanks for any insights.
Stephen Arnold.
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