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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wyatt, Neal
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ819043
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author Wyatt, Neal
author_facet Wyatt, Neal
Wyatt, Neal
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents "LJ" Series "Redefining RA": Keeping up with Genres Wyatt, Neal Librarians Literary Genres Classification Selection Tools Library Education Reference Services Reading Material Selection Genre is a hot issue in readers' advisory (RA) circles right now. Many people are looking at how genre functions and morphs. Studying a genre is not a new idea. Over two decades ago, and even longer in less formal ways, librarians began gathering to study genres--asking such questions as in what genre does this book fit and why, what are its features and categories, what are readers responding to, and which authors are they reading? Today, what most RA librarians take for granted--that there is a framework of knowledge that can be applied to broad classifications of books--did not always exist. The frameworks were developed through genre studies--the concentrated focus on a genre to discover its appeal. In this article, the author offers several tips for conducting genre studies.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ819043
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2008
record_format eric
spellingShingle "LJ" Series "Redefining RA": Keeping up with Genres
Wyatt, Neal
Librarians
Literary Genres
Classification
Selection Tools
Library Education
Reference Services
Reading Material Selection
"LJ" Series "Redefining RA": Keeping up with Genres Wyatt, Neal Librarians Literary Genres Classification Selection Tools Library Education Reference Services Reading Material Selection Genre is a hot issue in readers' advisory (RA) circles right now. Many people are looking at how genre functions and morphs. Studying a genre is not a new idea. Over two decades ago, and even longer in less formal ways, librarians began gathering to study genres--asking such questions as in what genre does this book fit and why, what are its features and categories, what are readers responding to, and which authors are they reading? Today, what most RA librarians take for granted--that there is a framework of knowledge that can be applied to broad classifications of books--did not always exist. The frameworks were developed through genre studies--the concentrated focus on a genre to discover its appeal. In this article, the author offers several tips for conducting genre studies.
title "LJ" Series "Redefining RA": Keeping up with Genres
topic Librarians
Literary Genres
Classification
Selection Tools
Library Education
Reference Services
Reading Material Selection
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ819043