If they are only available as a set, the set gets one ISBN. An ISBN is assigned to each book in the series. Yes, such reference works are routinely tracked by revenue strands individual vs. ISBNs are assigned to the package and to the individual products in the package if a the product is eligible for an ISBN and b the products are sold separately.
ISBNs are not assigned to magazines, academic journals or other periodicals. However, if a single issue of a periodical is being sold as a book, then that issue alone may be assigned an ISBN. Bowker is an affiliated business of ProQuest. Bowker LLC. Chicago: Condor Publications, Reprint, New York: B. Jove, I believe it is now optional to include the original publisher. The 6th ed.
In the 7th ed. Any idea how to make this work in Zotero? If not, I'd like to request that the functionality be added. March 2, See the ticket for original date. With all of these item type issues it might be a good idea to take a quick look at the issues tagged schema update. Some of your requests are in there and some should probably get their own tickets.
Thanks for the links, Trevor. I didn't realize this was already being addressed. December 2, Is there any update to this issue? I still cannot find original publisher etc. This will hopefully make it into Zotero 2. It is supported by CSL, so supporting it is relatively simple. See the types whiteboard for 2. September 26, I'm using the most current version of Zotero, and based on the tickets, it looks like this issue was addressed.
However, I still don't see a way to add information about reprints. Could someone please advise? September 27, January 18, Ticket above addresses this, but it hasn't seen any action in 3 years. I'd love to see this come to something; I have a lot of situations where I cite a modern facsimile of a historical treatise.
I want to let the reader know both how to find the modern printing and when the document itself was first printed. January 24, I use a temporary kludge in the csl. A difference in paging may be a typographical error. The publisher can change the content between impressions without leaving any clues. The cataloger's job is to use knowledge of the principles of AACR2, OCLC's guidelines, and common sense to use records which can reasonably be assumed to represent the item in hand, and create new records in other cases.
Publishers' use of the words Printing and 'reprint' Both of these words are often used to mean impression. If a publisher reproduces exactly a text that it has already published, this does not constitute a "distinctive bibliographic work. However, in the absence of a publication date, printing dates can be important. See AACR2 1. Statements such as "reprinted with corrections" and "2nd corrected printing" indicate that the text has changed.
They are treated as edition statements and require different copy than that used for the original edition. The wording of the definition implies that the content is ALWAYS the same, but further along, you see that new introductions may be added. The relationship between the republication and the original is shown in a note. See the RI for information about this note. In previous versions of the RI, the note began with the word "reprint," but apparently LC wanted terminology that more clearly distinguishes republications from impressions.
Note that a distinction is made between republications and microform reproductions of items published in print. The field provides fixed field information about the reproduction. This pattern is also used for on-demand photocopies e. UMI photocopies of dissertations and one-of-a-kind photocopies e. For more information, see Bibliographic Formats and Standards, Sections 3. Editing which involves areas potentially indicating a different edition While information that clearly indicates a different printing is ignored, in other cases, the record is edited to something which might seem to be a different edition, without creating a new record.
For example, a difference in paging might be judged to be a typo rather than an indication of change in content. The only date in the book may be a copyright date a year later than the one on the copy, but there is no evidence of change in the item. A common case is foreign imprints. In Romance languages and German, the same word can mean mean both "edition" and "impression. Different editions require different copy, different impressions do not.
The cataloger must search for clues to determine the meaning of "Aufl. Change in number of pages from one "ed. Chapter 4 of Bibliographic Formats and Standards offers the following guidance for the opposite situation: "If the edition statement appears in conjunction with the printer's name or the number of copies printed, generally consider the edition statement to reflect printing information.
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