Back of The Book Index1
Back of The Book Index1
Back of The Book Index1
Khasiah Zakaria
• Lampiran
• Glossari
• Indeks
• Rujukan
• Bibliografi
2
Who are communications
Professionals
EFA
Editors Indexers
Job
Copyeditors List Researchers
3
What is an INDEX?
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•The pointers are typically page numbers, paragraph
numbers or section numbers. In a library catalog the
words are authors, titles, subject headings, etc., and the
pointers are call numbers.
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About indexing
C
capitalization E
A
computer-assisted
indexing. editing indexes
abbreviations
entries.
adjectives and adverbs
See software for See also cross-references;
alphabetization.
indexing headings;
See also non-alphabetical
computer-generated page references
ordering
indexes.
automatic indexing.
See also software for
See automatic indexing
indexing
cross-references
B
D
bad breaks
double-posting
bestsellers
books about indexing
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FAQ (frequently asked questions)
F L
filing. See alphabetization
function words
letter-by-letter sorting.
See alphabetization
locators.
headings. See also function See cross-references;
words; page references
inversion; names; qualifiers H
headnotes. See introductory
notes
N
indexable matter names
indexing process. See also non-alphabetical ordering.
term selection I See also alphabetization
introductory notes
inversion
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P
S T
page references
process. See indexing
see, see also, see term selection
process
professional societies under references.
See cross-references
software for indexing.
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Purpose of Indexing
Indexes are designed to help the reader find information quickly and easily.
A complete and truly useful index is not simply a list of the words and
phrases used in a publication (which is properly called a concordance), but
an organized map of its contents, including cross-references, grouping of
like concepts, and other useful intellectual analysis.
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sage, 41-42. See also Herbs ← directing the reader to related terms Scarlet
Sages. See Salvia coccinea ← redirecting the reader to term used in the text
shade plants ← grouping term (may not appear in the text; may be generated
by indexer) hosta, 93 ← subentries myrtle, 46 Solomon's seal, 14 sunflower, 47
← regular entry In books, indexes are usually placed near the end (this is
commonly known as "BoB" or back-of-book indexing).
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Why do you need to index your
book?
• "Indexes are for readers who want quick access to
information. The index provides a gateway to the
author's ideas: it's the map to the book."
• The back-of-the-book index provides quick access to
ideas found throughout a book. Potential book buyers
know this and prefer to buy books with indexes.
• Amazon.com, book store buyers, librarians, book
reviewers, academics and educators all prefer books
with indexes. Studies have repeatedly shown that
books with quality indexes have increased sales.
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Why you need an indexer?
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Opinions: Back-of-the-book index
• Diodato (1994) made a survey of 255 librarians and college
professors and obtained their opinions of three elements of
back of book indexes.
• Both groups overwhelmingly preferred line-by-line
subheadings to the run-on arrangement, even though many
books use the latter format.
• Almost all librarians preferred word-by-word alphabetization
to the letter-by-letter method, but only about two thirds of the
professors shared this preference.
• Strongest disagreement between the two groups occurred
when most of the librarians preferred see references to
duplicate entries, while most professors selected duplicate
entries instead of see references.
• The article concludes that indexers and developers of indexing
standards should consider the preferences of index users.
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Should authors index their own
books?
• Wishes to learn the details of and then apply the publisher's style sheet for
indexing
• Understands or wants to learn the established principles and standards of
information retrieval (there are many, and they are detailed, often
contradictory or unintuitive and thus many decisions have to be made to
make the index truly useful to the reader, remembering the while that an
index is not an outline)
• Can lead the reader into the book via the index rather than rewriting the
book in the index can express complex ideas concisely
• Owns and knows how to use to fullest advantage software adequate for the
indexing project, remembering that both index cards and a word processor
fail to offer the de-scattering and subentry alphabetizing benefits (among
others) of the three professional software packages
• Can face yet another deadline - remembering that the index cannot be
written when the book is in manuscript form; it requires final pagination to be
completed first. By then the printer date is often set in stone so the index
deadline can be tight
• Can separate her- or himself from the book in order to write the index
instead of revising/rewriting the book yet again
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Index quality
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Indexing Pitfalls
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Indexing skills
Among them are:
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How to INDEX??
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Indexing process
• Conventional indexing
• The indexer reads through the text, identifying indexable concepts (those for
which the text provides useful information and which will be of relevance for
the text's readership). Or may use concordances software (see next slide)
• The indexer creates index headings, to represent those concepts, which are
phrased such that they can be found when in alphabetical order .
• These headings and their associated locators (indicators to position in the
text) are entered into indexing list
• The index is then edited to impose consistency throughout the index.
• Indexers must analyze the text to enable presentation of concepts and ideas
in the index that may not be named within the text.
• Always remember that : The index is intended to help the reader,
researcher, or information professional, rather than the author, find
information, so the indexer must act as a liaison between the text and the its
ultimate user.
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Concordance
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Concordances Software
Cobuild Direct (The Bank of English)
http://titania.cobuild.collins.co.uk/direct_info.html
Collins Cobuild English Collocations on CD-ROM
WordSmith v3.0
http://www.liv.ac.uk/~ms2928/
http://www1.oup.co.uk/elt/catalogu/multimed/4589846/4589846.html
Concordance
•http://www.concordancesoftware.co.uk/ 23
Tips
1.…… expected audience.
2.Teliti …teliti….
3.Minat ….
4.Baca …..back to back
5.Too EXHAUSTIVE…NOT GOOD,
6.MAJOR index should include explaination
7.Use Style sheet – kesilapan m/s add pages,
number , pelik, latin words..(editing process )
…A, B C…COLUMN.
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Qualifiers
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Indexing Software
• Macrex was the first back-of-the-book indexing
software package available for professional
indexers. Today, Macrex handles back-of-the-
book indexing, periodical indexes and web
indexing.
• Cindex provides standard features for indexing
books, newspapers and periodicals. These
features include sorting, cross-reference
checking and formatting.
• SKY Index also provides standard features for
back-of-the-book indexing. Advanced features
include autocomplete and "drag-and-drop"
embedding into Microsoft Word documents.
• wINDEX is a simple, economic indexing tool.
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CINDEX by
Indexing Research
180 Varick Street
Suite 1014
New York, New York 10014
Platforms: Windows 95 or higher; Power Macintosh running OS 8.0
or higher
Home page: www.indexres.com
MACREX by
Macrex Indexing Services
Beech House
Burn Road
Blaydon-on-Tyne
Tyne and Wear NE21 6JR, England
Platforms: Windows 3.1, 95, 98, NT and DOS
Home page: www.macrex.com
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Working with a
Freelance Indexer
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What Will It Cost?
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Editorial rates: Type of Work Estimated Pace Range of Fees
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Alphabetization 1
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Alphabetization 2
• pronunciation and meaning are ignored today in alphabetization.
• In word-by-word alphabetization, each word in a compound
heading is alphabetized in succession and separately.
• If the first words in the headings are equivalent, the second
words are compared. If the second are equivalent, the third are
compared, and so on until the headings are distinguished from
one another.
• In this process, the space character is assigned a value lower
than that assigned to any letter, and it is sorted - word-by-word
alphabetization is often called the nothing before something
system.
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Alphabetization 3
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Sample of letter-by-letter
Strict Chicago-style
letter-by-letter letter-by-letter
Jones, Adam Jones, Adam
Jonesboro Jones, Otis A. (1896-1963)
Jones Mountain Jones, Otis A. (1924-1989)
Jones, Nathan, and Fry Jones, Otis Augustus
Jones, Otis A. (1896-1963) Jonesboro
Jones, Otis A. (1924-1989) Jones Mountain
Jones, Otis Augustus Jones, Nathan, and Fry
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Sample of word-by-word
Letter-by-letter Word-by-word
soul soul
soulard crab soul brother
soul brother soul food
souletin soul kiss
soul food soul mate
soulful soul music
soul kiss soul sister
soullessness soulard crab
soul mate souletin
soul music soulful
soul sister soullessness
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If you ask another
person to Index
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Societies
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Indexer Jokes
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If we weren't called Indexers, what would we be called?
indicants Lighthousers
gnomonizers Disclosers
indexicalologists Pointers
fistidiographers Hint-givers
catagormaticalsumographers Mapsters
Original Search Engineers Tipsters
Directors Informants
Collectors Triangulators
Inventoriers Highlighters
Search Guides DeNote-rs
Prompters Passworders
Sniffers Neat-Nicks
Enlighteners Flaggers
Information Retrieval Specialists Distillers
Guidance Counselors Tattlers
Indicators Fingerers
Trailblazers Essence-Finders
Telltales Legend Writers
Treasure Mappers Unscramblers
Navigation Experts DeCryption Experts
Topographer extraordinaires Site Sighters
Order-Mongers Bearing Finders
Abcedarians Information Architects 43
Pye-makers Key Coders
Conventions/principle/
law/standard/custom/practice of
indexing
• headings at all levels are hanging paragraphs;
• subheadings are indented from the hanging
portion of the higher level heading;
• cross-references are separated from headings
and subheadings by a period and space, and
are capitalized and colored, and;
• See also cross-references follow the last
subheading. The hanging paragraph convention
allows the level of the entries to remain obvious
as the window displaying them is re-sized.
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References
• Diodato, V. (1994). User preferences for features in back of book indexes. Journal of the
American Society for Information Science, 45(7), 529-536.
Diodato, V. & Gandt, G. (1991). Back of book indexes and the characteristics of author and
nonauthor indexing: Report of an exploratory study. Journal of the American Society for
Information Science, 42(5), 341-350.
Enser, P. G. B. (1985). Automatic classification of book material represented by back-of-the-
book index. Journal of Documentation, 41(3), 135-155.
• Fugmann, R. (2006). Das Buchregister Methodische Grundlagen und praktische Anwendung.
Frankfurt am Main: DGI. (DGI Schrift; Informationswissenschaft - 10).
Grosch, A. N. (1986). Index-aid: Computer assisted back-of-the-book indexing. Electronic
Library, 4(5), 278-280.
• Hornyak, B. (2002). Indexing Specialties: Psychology. Medford, NJ :Information Today, Inc.
• Kendrick, P. & Zafran, E. L. (Eds.). (2001). Indexing Specialties: Law. Medford, NJ
:Information Today, Inc.
• School of Library, archival and information studies, The University of British Columbia.
Indexing resources on the WWW. Back-of-the-Book indexing.
http://www.slais.ubc.ca/resources/indexing/backof2.htm
• Schütze, H. (1998). The Hypertext Concordance: A Better Back-of-the-Book Index. In
Proceedings of Computerm '98 (Montreal, Canada, 1998), D. Bourigault, C. Jacquemin, and
M.-C. L'Homme, Eds., pp. 101-104.
• Stauber, D. M. (2004). Facing the text: Content and structure in book indexing. 1st ed.
Eugene, Or.: Cedar Row Press.
• Towery, M. (Ed.). (1998). Indexing Specialties: History. Medford, NJ :Information Today, Inc.
• Wyman, L. P. (Ed.). (1999). Indexing Specialities: Medicine. Medford, NJ :Information Today,
Inc.
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