After three weeks of correcting multiple errors on my VHS records and getting to a point where the errors are dwindling, it looks like I am ready to start to tackle some more complicated formats. This week I will take a stab at DVD’s and documentaries. My site advisor informed me the same movie in DVD form is going to much trickier to catalog than in VHS because of the added features and options that are available in DVD’s such as; commentary, deleted scenes, and subtitles. Documentaries may not have many more fields than a regular full length feature movie, but when it comes to subject headings, it becomes much more important that your headings are correct. Unlike a fiction move where you can add multiple subject headings to describe general themes of a movie, a documentary is usually about a specific thing or person. Bring it on!
Upon doing some additional research on the importance
of cataloging movies (or moving images) I came across The AMIA ( Association
of Moving Image Archivists) website, which puts forth a very convincing
argument on why it is important to catalog even what might appear to be the
most ridiculous looking movie.
I agree wholeheartedly with this statement, but…
“More than a reflection of society and culture, moving images are primary documents that can serve a wide range of research purposes. The director Sydney Pollack has said that cinema is “the most vivid and valuable record of who we were and what we were, and what we thought and what we believed. " (retrieved from http://www.amianet.org/)
I agree wholeheartedly with this statement, but…
My concern is that,
when the time comes that I would be responsible for deciding on adding an item
such as this, a) would I feel it worthy of the labor that needs to be invested
to make it a good record and b) why go to great lengths to catalog a format that
is essentially dead (VHS)? The University of Washington is one of the rare
exceptions in that while struggling financially, they have a school of library science
which provides a plethora of free labor (such as myself-even though I don’t
attend the iSchool). Cate did explain that the only reason that VHS tapes are
still cataloged is because the titles have not, and probably will never be, released in DVD. (Side note: this particular movie had been released in DVD
format, both on it’s own and part of a double feature along with a gem called “
Prehistoric Women”). Maybe
this falls back into the catch all category of cataloger's judgement. There are
so many factors to consider when building a collection and deciding what to
catalog. On top of that, each library,
institution, collection and user base has it own distinct needs. More than
learning the ins and outs of the skill of cataloging, I believe it is these
factors that would be the most important to learn when transitioning from
technician to cataloging librarian.
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