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As archival material is “unpublished”, most collections lack formal titles and therefore archives staff will usually supply the title. Main source of information: materials themselves, accession and donor records Content reference:
Output fields:
AS user manual: The title assigned to the resource. MIT Practice: Most resource records for MIT are at a “collection” level with any description applying to an aggregate of materials. However, since archivists describe at all levels, a resource record occasionally could theoretically represent only an item. Titles also need to be transcribed or supplied at other levels (for series, folder (file), and item components in a container list and standards for all these levels are listed below. Title is required for resource records at the collection level. At the collection level, the title is usually a concatenation of the creator name and a term describing the form of materials, whether general (papers, records) or specific (correspondence, diaries). Titles are used in the resource record in three places - all three should match:
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A title at the collection level has two parts; it is a combination of creator name and a term describing the form of materials.
Examples:
Capitalize official name of a body or entity, or person, but not the document type. Separate elements with a comma and use a comma after first part of corporate body, but not between the last word in the office and the word "records."
If there is a set of administrative records created by a person who has a distinct responsibility in a large office, add that name in this way:
Specific form If the collection consists of specific forms of material use the more specific form name in the title such as: correspondence or diaries
Title: Collection level, assembled collections Content reference:
If the Archives is the collector or assembler of the collection, use MIT Libraries as the creator. Use the word “collection” to denote an assemble set of materials.
Actual title: if a collection is an item with a defined title, use that.
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The title of a series may (but does not have to) consist of two parts, a descriptive word and a term describing the form of materials (correspondence, diaries). Style: use parallel construction, if Series 1 ends in a type of format then use a format for other series titles in the collection also: (Reports, Diary, Background Material). Examples:
Common series: ADD FROM ARRANGEMENT SECTION At the series level avoid using the more general “papers,” “records,” or “miscellaneous.” |
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Use the folder title given by the creator of the collection. For analog folders: if there is no folder title, supply one that is brief and concise. Examples:
Capitalizations Capitalize only the first word of the folder heading unless it is the official name of a body or entity, or the title of a book, movie, or journal article. If it is the name of a body or entity, or a book or journal title: capitalize the first letter of all words (except a, an, the, and prepositions) but capitalize the first letter of the title and subtitle no matter what the word. If original folder title supplied by the donor/creator is capitalized and is not the name of a body or entity, or a book or journal title, ignore their formatting. Examples:
Name order:
Dates in titles: This is usually the case when the title is an event such as a conference or meeting. Use for such events when the title of the folder does not match the dates of the materials. Examples:
Numbers in title: Style: Spell out numbers that begin folder title if from one to nine (except for course numbers). For all other numbers not at beginning of title, use digits. Example:
Multiple folders If you are foldering materials, maybe from a large binder, that fit into more than one folder, folders should be marked “1 of 2,” “2 of 2,” as necessary. Dates should be for the content in each folder. Add date span for all folders. Under Extents indicate how many folders. Colons
See Style Guidelines and Format & Materials for further guidance. LINK |
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