[DCRM-L] Name authorities for engravers
Rettberg, Dan
drettberg at huc.edu
Wed Oct 29 07:37:31 MDT 2008
My inclination would be to use the full form “engraver”, as your example indicates.
Dan
Daniel J. Rettberg
Rare Book and Manuscript Bibliographer
Klau Library
Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion
3101 Clifton Avenue
Cincinnati, OH 45220-2488
drettberg at huc.edu
________________________________
From: dcrm-l-bounces at lib.byu.edu [mailto:dcrm-l-bounces at lib.byu.edu] On Behalf Of Deborah J. Leslie
Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2008 6:41 PM
To: DCRM Revision Group List
Cc: afra at loc.gov
Subject: [DCRM-L] Name authorities for engravers
Dear colleagues,
I'm of two minds about a potentially useful (also, potentially stupid) descriptive phrase on headings or references for engravers, and I'd like to hear other perspectives. (I know I could shoot this question to Autocat, but would like to hear first what those say who are likelier to have dealt with this and similar issues.)
When faced with a surname only followed with "sculp." or variation on something I'm cataloging, I can sometimes spend quite a long time figuring out whether this person has already been established in NACO because I don't know his first name. My proposed remedy: make a reference on the NAR from the surname only with "sc." as a descriptive phrase, so that someone scanning a heading result list would quickly zero in on the "sc." (example: 400 Starling, ‡c sc.). You can find headings already established in NACO with "sculp." used as an addition to a surname-only heading to break a conflict (example: 100 Andre, ‡c sculp.).
The problem of course is that "sc." and its variations mean "engraved it," not "engraver."
Would it be appropriate to continue the practice of using the abbreviation of a Latin verb phrase as a descriptive phrase? Or would it be more appropriate to provide an English approximation of what "sculpsit" indicates rather than using the phrase itself (example: 100 Rivers, ‡c engraver). In any case, would it be helpful to provide cross references when a name appears on works without a forename but with "sculp."?.)
This has become a pressing topic for us since we're in the midst of a grant project to catalog and digitize images relating to Shakespeare, and we'll be submitting lots of NARS for engravers. I'd be grateful to hear your thoughts.
__________________________
Deborah J. Leslie, M.A., M.L.S.
Head of Cataloging
Folger Shakespeare Library
201 East Capitol St., S.E.
Washington, D.C. 20003
202.675-0369
djleslie at folger.edu | http://www.folger.edu <http://www.folger.edu>
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