How we construct subjects: A feminist analysis
HA Olson - Library trends, 2007 - muse.jhu.edu
HA Olson
Library trends, 2007•muse.jhu.eduTo organize information, librarians create structures. These structures grow from a logic that
goes back at least as far as Aristotle. It is the basis of classification as we practice it, and
thesauri and subject headings have developed from it. Feminist critiques of logic suggest
that logic is gendered in nature. This article will explore how these critiques play out in
contemporary standards for the organization of information. Our widely used classification
schemes embody principles such as hierarchical force that conform to traditional/Aristotelian …
goes back at least as far as Aristotle. It is the basis of classification as we practice it, and
thesauri and subject headings have developed from it. Feminist critiques of logic suggest
that logic is gendered in nature. This article will explore how these critiques play out in
contemporary standards for the organization of information. Our widely used classification
schemes embody principles such as hierarchical force that conform to traditional/Aristotelian …
To organize information, librarians create structures. These structures grow from a logic that goes back at least as far as Aristotle. It is the basis of classification as we practice it, and thesauri and subject headings have developed from it. Feminist critiques of logic suggest that logic is gendered in nature. This article will explore how these critiques play out in contemporary standards for the organization of information. Our widely used classification schemes embody principles such as hierarchical force that conform to traditional/Aristotelian logic. Our subject heading strings follow a linear path of subdivision. Our thesauri break down subjects into discrete concepts. In thesauri and subject heading lists we privilege hierarchical relationships, reflected in the syndetic structure of broader and narrower terms, over all other relationships. Are our classificatory and syndetic structures gendered? Are there other options? Carol Gilligan’s In a Different Voice (1982), Women’s Ways of Knowing (Belenky, Clinchy, Goldberger, & Tarule, 1986), and more recent related research suggest a different type of structure for women’s knowledge grounded in “connected knowing.” This article explores current and potential elements of connected knowing in subject access with a focus on the relationships, both paradigmatic and syntagmatic, between concepts.
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