Series title vs. main title

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When considering whether to treat an item as having a series title + volume title or as having a main title + part title, the first and most crucial decision to make is whether the item in hand is part of a "series" (such as a "monographic series"[1] or "multipart monograph"[2][3]), or whether it is "supplementary to, or a section of, another item"[4].

An additional case is item title + original title for cases like collections of serials or of articles from serials.

Volume in a series

For series, use a bibliographical record for each volume.[5] If there is a volume title, put the individual volume title in the 245 field, subfield a,[5] and the series title & numbering in 490.[5][6] Put the authorized form of the series in an 8XX field.[7]

If there is not a separate volume title, but the volume is cataloged separately (such as when the first book in a series has the same title as the series, or when cataloging a numbered-but-not-titled volume of something like "Dragonball Z" on a separate record), put the series title in the 245 field, subfield a, with the numbering in subfield n.[4][8]

If the the item is a video and the "series" is simply the title of the original TV series, the original radio series, or a movie series that is intended to be viewed in order, then put the "series" title in the 245 field, subfield a, the number (if any) in subfield n, and the specific volume title in subfield p.[9][10] (This is why the form Star Wars.‡nEpisode 1.‡pThe phantom menace and Lord of the Rings.‡pThe fellowship of the ring is used for those movies.)

Under RDA, LC catalogers are supposed to transcribe series properly (490 field) but not add access points for them (8XX field).[6][11]. In order to work around this, some LC catalogers pretend that the volume title is "dependent" (that is, cannot stand on its own as a title) and use 245 ‡a series title. ‡p volume title coding for series.[8] Other LC catalogers, especially when the series title is in a larger font than the volume title, will treat the series title as the "main title" and the volume title as a "subtitle", and thus use 245 ‡a series title : ‡b volume title coding for the series. Change these records to use the proper series coding for the comprehensive title and the proper main title coding for the specific volume title when importing these records into the CCS database.

Section of a single larger work

For supplementary parts or sections of a larger work cataloged separately, put the title of the "whole thing" in 245 ‡a and the title of the part in hand in 245 ‡p if the section title is not sufficient to identify the resource.[12] Otherwise, put the title of the part in hand in 245 ‡a and the title of the whole work in field 490.[13]

Note that individual parts of a multipart item are not automatically considered to be sections of a larger work.[6]

Republication from a serial

One special case that can be difficult to determine whether to treat a title as a "series" is when the item in hand is a collection of material originally published in magazine format. This includes comic books collected into a graphic novel and also collections of articles from periodicals like Better Homes & Gardens.

Generally, a republication of a single issue or a limited number of issues of a serial should be cataloged as a monograph.[14] This covers most of what public libraries are likely to collect.

If the "series" title is actually just the title of the original serial, treat that as a "related work" rather than as a series title or whole-work title and code it in a 730 field rather than a 490 or 245.[5][4]

If the title is authorized for use as a series in the authority file, then use it as a series. If the series uniform title is identical to that of the original serial, including any qualifiers, a 730 in addition to the 830 field is not necessary. If the series uniform title is not exactly identical to that of the original serial, including any qualifiers, then a 730 is required in addition to the 830, even if the "base" part of the uniform title is otherwise identical.

If series treatment would be more beneficial than related title treatment for a given series/serial title, then contact the authorities librarian to request a local exception. Examples of situations where a local series may be beneficial are cases where the serial title may be thought of as a "series" title by the public (such as many graphic novel series), because the series title displays on OPAC hit lists; or in cases where only some volumes of a "series" reprint issues from a serial of that title (such as the "Superman" series of graphic novels, which reprints issues from Superman, Adventures of Superman, Action Comics, The Man of Steel, and other serials), as then all volumes of the series are treated consistently, rather than those that reprint issues of the eponymous serial being treated one way and those that reprint issues of the related serials being treated differently.

References

  1. RDA, Glossary, "Series (1)"
  2. RDA, Glossary, "Multipart monograph"
  3. RDA, Glossary, "Part (1)"
  4. a b c RDA 2.3.1.7
  5. a b c d RDA 1.5.3
  6. a b c LC-PCC PS 2.12
  7. RDA 6.27.1
  8. a b LC-PCC PS 2.3.1.7
  9. LC-PCC PS 6.27.1.9 Appendix 1, PCC Practice for Assigning Uniform Titles (Cataloging a Motion Picture Itself), (Cataloging a Television Program Itself), and (Cataloging a Radio Program Itself)
  10. AMIM 6. Series Area
  11. LC-PCC PS 6.27, "LC Practice"
  12. RDA 2.3.1.7.1
  13. RDA 2.3.1.7.2
  14. LC-PCC PS 0.0, "Determining Mode of Issuance", "Situations Requiring Further Consideration", E. Republications