BIBLIOGRAPHIC CLASSIFICATION THEORY AND TEXT LINGUISTICS: ABOUTNESS ANALYSIS, INTERTEXTUALITY AND THE COGNITIVE ACT OF CLASSIFYING DOCUMENTS
Abstract
A strong definition of aboutness and a theory of its role in information retrieval systems have not been developed. Such a definition and theory may be extracted from the work of T. A. van Dijk. This paper discusses some of the implications of van Dijk's work for bibliographic classification theory. Two kinds of intertextuality are identified: that between documents classified in the same class of the same classification system; and that between the classification system as a text in its own right and the documents that are classified by it. Consideration of the two kinds of intertextuality leads to an investigation of the linguistic/cognitive processes that have been called the ‘translation’ of a document topic into a classificatory language. A descriptive model of the cognitive process of classifying documents is presented. The general design of an empirical study to test this model is suggested, and some problems of implementing such a study are briefly identified. It is concluded that further investigation of the relationships between text linguistics and classification theory and practice might reveal other fruitful intersections between the two fields.
Citation
BEGHTOL, C. (1986), "BIBLIOGRAPHIC CLASSIFICATION THEORY AND TEXT LINGUISTICS: ABOUTNESS ANALYSIS, INTERTEXTUALITY AND THE COGNITIVE ACT OF CLASSIFYING DOCUMENTS", Journal of Documentation, Vol. 42 No. 2, pp. 84-113. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb026788
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1986, MCB UP Limited