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Explore the historical disdain for fiction in libraries and the evolution to recognizing it as part of cultural heritage. Discover shifts in literary studies, the impact of feminism, and changes in the literary canon. Discuss the value of fiction, subject access advancements, and the purpose of children's collections in libraries.
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Subject access to fiction Why bother?
Fiction’s place in the library collection • Libraries’ historic tendency to hold works of imagination in much contempt • Fiction as a blight on the collection, a prurient black art that entices and seduces
History • Libraries attempted to control and reduce the amount of fiction reading by several methods: • 2 [or 4] book system • Ribbon arrangement
Evolution • From a frivolous, dangerous and troubling component of library collections to a part of our culture; literary texts as manmade, historically produced objects • 20th century change in literary studies
The Canon • Used to be a collection of books read and studied by English lit majors, a collection that constituted the intellectual heritage of educated Americans, a.k.a. “masterpieces” • Fixed and closed, with rare exceptions
Recent changes • Started in 1960s and 70s • Ethnic profile of both students and faculty have changed dramatically • Multiculturalism has increased demand for a literature that reflects a group’s experience, a literature of their own
Impact of feminism* • The “canon” did not reflect the true history of women • Proponents disinterred the history of women by finding evidence where they could, including fiction • Much of the feminist studies in the 1970s helped explode the boundaries of acceptable, studied literature *used as a pattern heading
Discussion • Do works of the imagination have value? • Are they content carriers? • What information do we obtain from them?
Changes • Library of Congress now assigns subject headings to fiction • Guidelines for subject access to fiction, 2nd edition • How has this changed access to fiction?
Subject access to children’s materials • Fiction and nonfiction • What is the purpose of children’s collection?
To summarize • Subject searching is an art, not a science • Is technology the answer? • Subject access to all materials