Zine Cataloging
by Sanford Berman
a talk delivered at the 2nd Annual Madison Zine Fest, October 2005

I guess I'm expected to talk about cataloging zines. But the terrible truth is that I never cataloged a zine. So it's with some chutzpah that I approach the topic. However, I have either myself cataloged or supervised that cataloging of library materials about zines.

So let's address three issues or possibilities:

  1. How did ZINES finally get established as a bona fide Library of Congress subject heading? And how can it be used in library catalogs to identify zines themselves and materials about them?
  2. Would it be useful--for catalog users and librarians--to be able to identify, through the assignment of specific sub-genre headings, particular categories or kinds of zines?
  3. What about making ZINES available as a subheading, like --PERIODICALS? So instead of assigning BOOKS AND READING--PERIODICALS to Jenna Freedman's Lower East Side Librarian Winter Solstice Shout Out, annual, it would get BOOKS AND READINGS--ZINES?

Another question, is whether to treat zines as periodical runs or catalog them as single, individual issues, the latter approach surely permitting much more detailed note-making and subject analysis, but also being more labor intensive. Knowing that Jenna and Jim Danky have opposing views on this, perhaps they'll express their opinions later.
 

1.

Once upon a time--well, actually in early 1993, or 12 years ago, Hennepin County Library in Minnesota established a new subject heading for ZINES, announced it--together with a scope note and cross-references--in HCL CATALOGING BULLETIN No. 123, and formally recommended to the Library of Congress that they do likewise. We first assigned the ZINES rubric to Gunderloy and Janice's World of zines: a guide to the independent magazine revolution, a 1992 title. That assignment was made with a subhead for --HISTORY AND CRITICISM.

Until that time, the closest available LC form was FANZINE, which of course could legitimately apply to pop culture fan magazines, but no longer truly categorized or denoted what in our public note we described as

"Underground," counterculture magazines that typically are "printed, cheap, often given away, and rarely profitable," self-published as "voices of individuality and dissent" by people committed to self-expression.

We retained FANZINES as a subcategory, making a "see also" reference to it from ZINES. Subsequently, the BULLETIN printed many further usage-examples and definitions for "Zines," always sharing with LC in the ever-optimistic hope that they, too, would enlarge access to the growing zine-phenomenon by recognizing it with a discrete subject heading. I left Hennepin County Library in 1999. Perhaps a year ago, I renewed the campaign to create a ZINES heading by directly sending articles, postcards, fliers, and brochures, as well as bibliographic citations, to the Chief of LC's Cataloging Policy & Support Office. All these materials clearly demonstrated the reality, vitality and uniqueness of zine publishing. (Incidentally, HCL had also innovated a descriptor for ZINE PUBLISHING in 1993.) As of about March this year, the response--to me, at least--had been decidedly tepid. And then, by the end of June--maybe due to divine intervention or more likely further requests from people like Andrea Grimes at San Francisco Public's zine collection--LC did it, finally establishing a ZINES heading. They have not yet, however, also innovated headings for ZINE DISTRIBUTORS and ZINE LIBRARIES, nor have they mandated a "see also" from SELF-PUBLISHING to the new ZINES--PUBLISHING. They HAVE introduced a potentially "blind" see-also reference from ZINES to UNDERGROUND PERIODICALS (which itself deserves replacing by the more commonly employed and inclusive ALTERNATIVE PRESS).

 

Okay. Now that we belatedly have the heading, what's to be done with it? I suggest two things, following HCL practice:

+assign ZINES alone as a genre heading only to actual zines in the collection. Thus a ZINES search will retrieve all your zine holdings in presumably an alphabetical, main-entry order.

+assign ZINES to materials dealing with the genre only with subheads: e.g. ZINES--BIBLIOGRAPHY, ZINES--HISTORY AND CRITICISM, ZINES--POLITICAL ASPECTS, or ZINES--REVIEWS.
 

2.

Given the proliferation of zines, it might enhance searching and produce fewer indigestibly long sequences if a series of sub-category genre headings were developed and then assigned, when appropriate, instead of the simple ZINES rubric. (Naturally, these forms would enjoy a "see also" reference from the broader, umbrella term, ZINES.) My sense is that many zine sub-genres have emerged--and so should be identified and be made retrievable--just as we already do with the larger concept or genre, PERIODICALS (for instance, GAY PERIODICALS, POLITICAL PERIODICALS, and RELIGIOUS PERIODICALS). Laura Griffin, way back in 1993, already observed such categories as "literary zines, sports zines, computer zines, and science-fiction zines." In the meantime, I've noticed references to girl or grrrrrl zines, queer zines, grafitti zines, goth zine, and perzines. My hope is that somewhere--perhaps at Ohio State or Salt Lake City Public--someone is confecting a mini-thesaurus of zine categories that might be proposed to LC--but in any event could be employed in-house by sizeable zine collections to permit more specific and helpful access to the zine cosmos. (Parenthetically, Mike Diana's infamous and ultimately censored Boiled angel might have merited a heading like COMIC ZINES, LC now recognizes two sub-genres: FANZINES and E-ZINES, and HCL in the late 90s innovated a rubric for QUEER ZINES.)
 

3.

Lastly, understanding that zines, like any other periodicals, should be assigned relevant topical headings, why not subdivide those topical headings by --ZINES itself instead of --PERIODICALS? The result, for instance, would be that Jenna's product would appear under BOOKS AND READING--ZINES and LIBRARIANS--ZINES, rather than being subsumed (and possibly less retrievable) within the larger standard categories: BOOKS AND READINGS--PERIODICALS and LIBRARIANS--PERIODICALS. (Again, "see also" ref should be made from the "Periodicals" form to the "Zines" sub-category.)

Whaddya think?
 

 

 Posted courtesy of the Barnard Library Zine Collection February 16, 2006 with the permission of Sanford Berman.