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For all you people...
...who think that being a librarian is jsut about checking out and shelving books, here's a journal article on the complexities of cataloging manga series.
(Me? I barely got through Cataloging by the skin of my teeth - don't ask me to go into detail on it. XD)
ETA: Just to point out
rachelmanija's comment below on the, er, non-library-technical aspects of the article.
(and that should get some niceraging discussion going on here in the comments to entertain me for the rest of the day.)
(Me? I barely got through Cataloging by the skin of my teeth - don't ask me to go into detail on it. XD)
ETA: Just to point out
(and that should get some nice

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[happily took to Cataloging like a duck to water]
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...how weird, my Cataloging class was exactly the same--online, summer. But my prof. didn't break out the weird items till the end of the semester, when she'd already guided us (with plenty of handholding) through cataloging 'normal' books.
So in that case it's your professor's fault, not yours! :D
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We were divided into groups and did everything as a group project, and luckily my group contained a librarian who'd been cataloging for years, who fixed our problems and explained to us what we were missing
not that it stuck. A friend of mine in the smae class and group was having the same problems I did, and we'd end up IMing each other during the class chat sessions moaning and complaining and making snarky remarks. XDno subject
1. "Anime" used when she means "manga."
2. Manga series never end. (It seems like at least half of them do come to a conclusive, and frequently pre-planned, end.)
3. They all focus on the battle between good and evil (WTF? Nana; Hana-Kimi; Barefoot Gen; Planetes; Hikaru no Go; etc)
4. Good always triumphs (Possibly, good triumphs more often than not. Possibly.)
5. "Imagination and creativity are not required" (of the reader). Which is why there is no such thing as fanfic or manga analysis.
6. Teens who read lots of manga won't be able to read regular books. (What a goddamn snob. Does she have any evidence for that?)
7. Manga are basically TV shows and video games in book format. (I would say that no, in fact, they are a very different medium from TV, which you can see by looking at the manga and anime versions of the same story, and not at all like video games, because if they were, they'd be choose-your-own-adventure.)
That's all on the first page, where I gave up.
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:D
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"Publications like Classics Illustrated Comics are making a comeback with titles all of us read as kids and valiant attempts to introduce teen readers to authors as difficult as Proust. So perhaps, teens, like us, will climb the reading ladder and move on from graphic novels to serious adult fiction."
*raises shields*
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I think the bit that kicked me over the edge was going and rereading and noting on the second page that she says it's all Japanese, which of course makes me wonder about the piles of Korean and OEL stuff on my shelves.
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My cataloger's heart still jumps happily at the combination of manga and MARC tagging, but you're right, the author needs a good thump over the head with 'Manga 101'.
[sabotages own technical services career by writing a strongly-worded e-mail to the offending publication]
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That said, I personally would catalog them as "fiction" - or, preferably, do what most libraries I know do and create a section just for manga and graphic novels.