THE INDEXER: The International Journal of Indexing
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Article titles are followed by the authors’ names; place of appearance is indicated by volume and page numbers. The link from volume and page numbers will lead to information on publication dates thus yielding a complete reference to the article.

General

The 1866 catalogue of the Board of Trade Library: an early Wheatley catalogue. K.A. Mallaber 7.42–5
Fingerprint indexing. J.W. Godsell 4.41–7
‘I copied all the letters in a big, round hand’: indexing W.S. Gilbert. Geoffrey Dixon 16.92–6
Indexing a local planning enquiry. Alison Raisin 13.107–10
Subject knowledge – how it helps take care of the business. Sylvia Coates. 28.173–175

Archaeology

Problems of archaeological indexing. Cherry Lavell 12.175–84
Indexing of a computerized bibliography for London’s archaeology. Audrey Adams 14.235–40
Compiling a general index to Sussex Archaeological Collections. Ann Hudson 17.83–90
A database of radiocarbon dates for archaeology. Cherry Lavell 19.173–6
On indexing The heritage of North Cyprus: a personal approach. Rosamond Hanworth 19.205–7

Architecture/planning

Indexing a Victorian architectural journal: The Builder project. Ruth Richardson 16.85–6

Art

The Index of Christian Art. Anna C. Esmeijer and William S. Heckscher 3.97–119
Three encyclopaedia indexes (inc. Encyclopedia of world art). Delight Ansley 5.16–22
Case history of the compilation of a large cumulative index (to A. Venturi’s Storia dell’arte Italiana). Jacqueline D. Sisson 10.164–75/194
The unconventional index and its merits (on a text analysing Dürer’s ‘Melancolia I’). William S. Heckscher 13.5–25
Scholarly search for the truth. M. Mallory & G. Moran 19.99–101
Layered indexing of images. Kimberly A. Schroeder. 21.11–14

Botany

Indexing botanical and horticultural texts. Alex S. George 25.253–254
Environmental studies and natural history texts: indexing issues. Therese Shere. 27.50–57

Commerce

Scottish tartans: an indexing challenge. Keith Lumsden 22.69–71

Environmental studies

Environmental studies and natural history texts: indexing issues. Therese Shere. 27.50–57

Fiction

Indexing science fiction. P. Schuyler Miller 6.163–4
A long fiction index (to Scott’s Waverley novels). Philip Bradley 8.153–63
Compiling the first Fiction Index. Alan Glencross 13.86–7
Compiling Cumulated fiction index 1975–1979. M.E. Hicken 13.88–9
Para-index and anti-index. Judy Batchelor 16.194
Indexes to works of fiction: the views of producers and users on the need for them. Philip Bradley 16.239–46
Indexing fiction: a story of complexity. Hazel K. Bell 17.251–6
Should fiction be indexed? The indexability of text. Hazel K. Bell 18.83–6
A Marshland index [works of S. L. Bensusan]. John A. Vickers. 19.276–8
Indexes as fiction and fiction as paper-chase. Hazel K. Bell. 20.209–11
Thirty-nine to one: indexing the novels of Angela Thirkell. Hazel K. Bell. 21.6–10
From thesaurus to ontology: the development of the Kaunokki Finnish fiction thesaurus. Jarmo Saarti and Kaisa Hypén. 28.50–58

Folklore

The Department of Irish Folklore, University College, Dublin. Helen Litton 22.170–3

Geography

Indexing of alternative place-names (especially in the Near East). H. V. Molesworth-Roberts 6.179
Cartographic indexing. Deborah M. Smith 9.18–20
The indexing of Welsh place-names. Donald Moore 15.3–8
Topographical indexing. J.F.W. Bryon 15.211–14
All over the map. 18.152
Creating indexes for world atlases at HarperCollins Publishers. Jim Irvine 24.119–122

Government information

Indexing the proceedings and publications of the Scottish Parliament. Tori Spratt and Shona Skakle 22.65–8
The parliament of Canada: indexing the work of the Senate committees. Stephanie Bilodeau. 26.114–117
Herding cats: indexing British Columbia's political debates using controlled vocabulary. Canada. Julie McClung. 27.66–69
One index, two formats: print versus web indexes for political debates in British Columbia. Julie McClung. 28.110–115

History

Indexing ancient history. Robert D. Rodriguez 14.207–8
Indexing deeds and documents. Robert L. Collison 5.113–23
The British Record Society—eighty years of an index. Peter Spufford 6.19–23
Indexing science fiction. P. Schuyler Miller 6.163–4
Indexing Victoria’s historic criminal records. Jean Uhl 10.24–6
Indexing Victoria’s shipping records. Douglas Bishop 10.27–9
Twenty-five years of history indexing. Eric H. Boehm 11.33–42
The indexing work of Family History Societies. J.S.W. Gibson 13.83–5
Indexes for local and family history. John Chandler 13.223–7
Computer-assisted production of bibliographic databases in history. Joyce Duncan Falk 12.131–9
User approaches to indexes [Family History]. Jean Stirk 16.75–8
Observations on the indexing of history. Matthew Benjamin Gilmore 16.159–62
Thirty-nine to one: indexing the novels of Angela Thirkell. Hazel K. Bell. 21.6–10
Indexing Roman imperialism. John Richardson 24.138–140
‘A funny lot’: indexing and local history books. Bob Trubshaw 24.184–185
Christian history: 3,000 years and an author’s indexing thereof. Diarmaid MacCulloch. 28.108–109

Horticulture

Indexing botanical and horticultural texts. Alex S. George 25.253–254
Environmental studies and natural history texts: indexing issues. Therese Shere. 27. 50–57

Images

(see also Art; Photographs and films)
Streamlining PRECIS just for laughs! (Musée ... pour rire). C. Jacobs and C. Arsenault. 19.88–92
Layered indexing of images. Kimberly A. Schroeder. 21.11–14
Indexing training and workflow on large digitization projects. Kimberly A. Schroeder. 21.67–9
If a picture is worth a thousand words, then ... Christine Jacobs. 21.119–21
Capturing moving images online. Ann Cameron 24.142–144
Indexing ordinary images: challenges and perspectives. Elaine Menard. 27.70–76
Illustrative material and how to handle it. Max McMaster. 29.123–6
Chicken or egg theory: do we truly know how they search? Elaine Ménard. 29.150–6

Intelligence information

The index of Enigma messages. Elizabeth Wallis and Cherry Lavell 22.31–3
Indexing the intelligence: some inferences, some speculations. Rodney Brunt 22.187–190

Language

(see also Countries and Languages)
Syntactic and semantic relationships — or: a review of PRECIS. P.F. Broxis 10.54–9
Linguistics and indexing. David Crystal 14.3–7
Indexing a reference grammar. David Crystal 15.67–72
Natural-language processing and automatic indexing. C. Korycinski and Alan F. Newell 17.21–9
Natural-language processing and automatic indexing— a reply. Kevin P. Jones 17.114–15
Bias in indexing and loaded language. Hazel K. Bell 17.173–7
Selected linguistic problems in indexing within the Canadian context. Lisa Rasmussen 18.87–91
Is there anybody there? David Crystal 19.3.153–4
Marot, Hofstadter, index [Douglas Hofstadter’s translation of Ma mignonne by Clément Marot]. Christine Shuttleworth. 21.22–3
Quote index unquote. David Crystal 22.14–20
The expanding worlds of reference. Tom McArthur 22.86–90
Bibliography in a digital age. Geraldine Triffitt. 26.127–131

Law

Legal indexing. A.R. Hewitt 3.136–45
Indexes old and new. G. Chowdharay-Best 9.168–9
Indexing in a State Parliamentary Library. Josephine McGovern 10.78–80/86
On citing Acts of Parliament and related law. Richard Haig-Brown 11.205–8
Legal vocabulary and the indexer. Elizabeth M. Moys 18.75–8
The Consolidated Index to Law Reports. Brian Symondson 18.79–82
Building a global legal index: a work in progress. Madeleine Davis 22.123–7
Indexing: it’s the law! Bella Hass Weinberg 24.79–82
Indexing the law: a controlled vocabulary. Mark Scott 24.123–126
Developing and using new reference tools to search the jurisprudence of the World Trade Organization: the case of the Appellate Body Repertory. Iain Sandford, Steve Cooper and Fernando Preto Ramos 24.218–222
The Legal indexing SIG. Mary Harper 26.86

Medicine

The Journal of Anatomy: index to the first hundred years 1866–1966. D. Blake and R.E.M. Bowden 6.48–51
The indexing of medical books and journals. John Gibson 13.173–5
Indexes of German-language biomedical abstracting journals. Joachim Thuss 14.35–41
Medical abbreviations and acronyms. Doreen Blake and John Gibson 14.205–6
Indexing medical journals. Doreen Blake 17.33–4
Indexing the British Medical Journal. Richard Jones 19.13–18
Medical indexes reviewed. Pilar Wyman. 21.124–6
Medical indexing in the United States. Janyne Ste Marie 27.59–61
Hand-helds as ereaders: exploratory thoughts on hand-held devices and indexes. Pilar Wyman. 30.17–24

Military

Indexing defence: an indexer’s defence. Richard Munro 24.21–23
Nulli Secundus: a volunteer effort. Edyth Binkowski 25.125–127

Music

Indexing gramophone records. E.T. Bryant 2.90–4
Notes on music indexing. J.H. Davies 2.124–6
Of music and indexing. Percy Young 16.177–80
Musical bumps: indexing musical terms. Helga Perry 16.251–3
Where’s that tune? Sarah J. Crofts 19.189–91
Music: special characteristics for indexing and cataloguing. Jane A. Myers 19.269–74
MeloDex: Indexing hymn tunes. Peter Ralph Coates. 21.37
Indexing traditional African musical instruments. Marlene Burger 21.169–71
Music indexing and retrieval: current problems. Elizabeth Kelly 28.163–166
Carols for indexers. Mary Russell and Maureen MacGlashan. 29.50-55

Names

(see also under Countries and Languages)
Arrangement of entries in Post Office telephone directories 2.142–3
The hereditary peerage. Hebe Jerrold 3.130
Indexing peers. M.D. Anderson 4.51
Post Office filing. M. Gorman & G.N. Knight 7.118–20
Developing a system of indexing surnames in the Home Office. John L. Rush 12.81–2
An Ordinary of Arms, Vol. II, 1902–1973. Vivien Wilson 12.195–7
Coping with a title: the indexer and the British aristocracy. David Lee 17.155–60
Name of an author! Anne B. Piternick 18.95–9

Natural history

Environmental studies and natural history texts: indexing issues. Therese Shere. 27. 50–57

 

Philately

Computer-aid for philatelic indexing. Roberta Palen 12.207–9
The National Philatelic Society indexing project. Ian Crane. 18.33–4

Politics

The Northern Ireland Political Collection at the Linen Hall Library. John Gray 22.175–7
Herding cats: indexing British Columbia's political debates using controlled vocabulary. Canada. Julie McClung. 27.66–69

Religion and theology

The Index of Christian Art. Anna C. Esmeijer and William S. Heckscher 3.97–119
The Jewish Chronicle index 1841— . John M. Shaftesley 4.3–13
Three encyclopaedia indexes (inc. New Catholic encyclopedia). Delight Ansley 5.16–22
The index of the Encyclopaedia Judaica. Raphael Posner 8.101–11
Indexing the works of John Wesley. John A. Vickers 10.176–7
On indexing John Wesley. John A. Vickers 11.189–97
The oldest printed indexes (St Augustine). Hans H. Wellisch 15.73–82
Father of the man (George Fox). John A. Vickers 17.20
A scriptural index to Hymns and Psalms. Oliver A. Beckerlegge 18.27–9
Indexes and religion: reflections on research in the history of indexes. Bella Hass Weinberg. 21.111–18
Index structures in early Hebrew Biblical word lists: preludes to the first Latin concordances. Bella Hass Weinberg 22.178–186
Christian history: 3,000 years and an author’s indexing thereof. Diarmaid MacCulloch. 28.108–109

Science and technology

Technical indexing. L.E.J. Helyar 2.134–7
A scientific examination of codification. F.R. Gurney 4.67–80
The indexing of scientific books. J. Edwin Holmstrom 4.123–31
An analytical index to documents on aerodynamics. R.C. Wright 4.81–2
Three encyclopaedia indexes (inc. Encyclopedia of science and technology). Delight Ansley 5.16–22
Citation indexing (Science Citation Index). John Martyn 5.5–15
Scientific and technical indexing. E.J. Coates 5.27–34
The World list of scientific periodicals. Kenneth I. Porter 5.70–8
Indexing technical matter: some practical experience on both sides of two fences. Neil R. Fisk 6.42–7
User preferences in technical indexes. John F. Drage 6.151–5
Aims and methods of the British Technology Index. E.J. Coates 3.146–52
The state of the indexing art in British Engineering books. Bruce S.C. Harling 8.13–16
Technical indexing at BTI. Alan Singleton 9.37–49
Computer-based indexing systems: implications for the book indexer. John J. Eyre 9.53–7
Division of labour in rapid indexing of technical periodicals. J. Edwin Holmstrom 11.216–19
Patent classification and information retrieval services. Andrew Bayer 12.117–24
Computer-aided indexing of technical manuals. Paul Hardy 15.22–4
Chemical and numerical indexing for the INSPEC database. J.C. Deaves & J.E. Pache 16.163–7
The Persian Agrovoc in an indexing context. Mohammad Reza Falahati Qadimi Fumani. 29.23–29
Scientific texts and the indexer. Walter Greulich. 29.114–22
The Poehlman case: understanding and indexing ethical problems in scientific journals. Carolyn Brown. 29.179–84

Social sciences

The development of the Chinese Social Sciences Citation Index. Weina Hua 22.128–9

Theatre

Indexing theatre programmes. Dennis Bryans. 26.118–120

 

 
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