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The LGBTQIA+ Community

Research tool for using the Lewis University Library materials and resources to their fullest potential in regard to the LGBTQIA+ community

Subject Headings in Library Catalogs

Subject Headings in Libraries


You may or may not know that different systems of book classification exist in libraries.

Our library, like most university libraries, uses the Library of Congress Classification system (the curious can learn more HERE) to determine how we organize our bookshelves.

Field-specific vocabulary used to classify where a book should go is called a subject heading, and each library uses these various subject headings to "tag" books and make them searchable. Your job is to find out the subject headings that will produce the results you want.

Reminder: the keywords and subject headings used for academic journals and newspapers do not follow the systems libraries use, meaning that more relevant and contemporary vocabulary might get used in a popular magazine, but would not show up as good of search results compared to the standardized subject headings.

Helpful Library of Congress Subject Headings

Use these to begin your research in our catalog, Primo:List of subject headings related to queer theory

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Image at right taken from our search catalog, showing examples of subject headings and how many titles are within each. For example, "Queer theory" has 10 titles if we select it.

Special Subtopics

There might be specific topics about the LGBTQIA+ community upon which you would like to focus, so here are some helpful steps to expand or limit your search results toward a chosen direction.

Example of more subject headings for queer theory

  1. Type the phrase or wording about the LGBTQIA+ subtopic in the search bar at the top of Primo. Make sure to select, also, whether you would prefer items to be from our local library, our partner libraries in I-Share, or from either (aka "everything.")
  2. Scan the titles in the search results to determine if the types of materials found fit your general direction of inquiry.
  3. Select one of the results that seems to fit your topic best and scroll down to where it shows subject headings as blue hyperlinks.
  4. Look through them to see if any of them pertain best to your subject, maybe even opening several good options in new tabs.
  5. Repeat this process as many times as you need to find the best phrases to conjure up the materials you need.

Keep track of these subject heading terms, as they can be used on other research databases, and even at other libraries!

Book cover for the Queer Renaissance

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For instance, the book featured at the right, The Queer Renaissance, by Robert McRuer from 1997 (linked HERE) provides us with several subject headings that cater to just American Lesbian and Gay community members, which might or might not be helpful to you.