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Article
Stretching conceptual structures in classifications across languages and cultures.
Cataloging and Classification Quarterly (2003)
  • Barbara H. Kwasnik, Syracuse University
  • Victoria L. Rubin, Syracuse University
Abstract

The authors describe the difficulties of translating classifications from a source language and culture to another language and culture. To demonstrate these problems, kinship terms and concepts from native speakers of fourteen languages were collected and analyzed to find differences between their terms and structures and those used in English. Using the representations of kinship terms in the Library of Congress Classification (LCC) and the Dewey Decimal Classification (DDC) as examples, the authors identified the source of possible lack of mapping between the domain of kinship in the fourteen languages studied and the LCC and DDC. Finally, some preliminary suggestions for how to make translated classifications more linguistically and culturally hospitable are offered.

Keywords
  • Classification,
  • translation,
  • cultural hospitality,
  • Dewey Decimal Classification,
  • library of Congress Classification.
Publication Date
2003
Publisher Statement
The downloadable article is the final manuscript of the article, Stretching conceptual structures in classifications across languages and cultures in Classification & Cataloging Quarterly. All rights reserved to the authors, Kwasnik, B., & Rubin, Victoria. The article is under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 Licenses. ” To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/J104v37n01_04
Citation Information
Barbara H. Kwasnik and Victoria L. Rubin. "Stretching conceptual structures in classifications across languages and cultures." Cataloging and Classification Quarterly Vol. 37 Iss. 1/2 (2003)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/barbara_kwasnik/3/