2005
DOI: 10.1086/431331
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Citation Analysis for Collection Development: A Comparative Study of Eight Humanities Fields

Abstract: This study analyzes 9,131 citations from the 2002 volumes of journals in eight humanities fields: art, classics, history, linguistics, literature, music, philosophy, and religion. This study found that citation patterns varied widely among humanities disciplines. Due to these differences, it is important for librarians with humanities collection development responsibilities to consider each field separately when making collection development decisions. The authors investigated the language of sources cited in … Show more

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Cited by 81 publications
(54 citation statements)
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References 28 publications
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“…Yet one of the main features of the humanities is their reliance on monographs, which still are the main publication channel in most humanities disciplines (Thompson, 2002;Knievel and Kellsey, 2005;Larivière et al, 2006;Williams et al, 2009), and specifically in historiography (Jones et al, 1972). As a consequence, the most cited literature in any field within the humanities should essentially include monographs (Hicks, 1999), indeed the conclusion reached by some previous studies (Lindholm-Romantschuk and Warner, 1996;Hammarfelt, 2011Hammarfelt, , 2012, even if others struggled to find a set of core works in specific fields (McCain, 1987;Thompson, 2002;Nolen and Richardson, 2016).…”
Section: Monographs and The Core Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet one of the main features of the humanities is their reliance on monographs, which still are the main publication channel in most humanities disciplines (Thompson, 2002;Knievel and Kellsey, 2005;Larivière et al, 2006;Williams et al, 2009), and specifically in historiography (Jones et al, 1972). As a consequence, the most cited literature in any field within the humanities should essentially include monographs (Hicks, 1999), indeed the conclusion reached by some previous studies (Lindholm-Romantschuk and Warner, 1996;Hammarfelt, 2011Hammarfelt, , 2012, even if others struggled to find a set of core works in specific fields (McCain, 1987;Thompson, 2002;Nolen and Richardson, 2016).…”
Section: Monographs and The Core Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The study of Georgas and Culler (2005), however, failed to identify any set of core journals in the field contrary to Zwaan and Nederhof's who found ten core journals in linguistics. Evidences from Knievel and Kellsey's (2005) and Karisson's (1994) show that language and literary scholarship rely heavily on books and monographs, citing older publications, making use of essentially primary information sources and near absence of core journals.…”
Section: Citation Patterns and Scholarly Communication In Languagesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a trio of articles, Kellsey and Knievel (2004), Knievel and Kellsey (2005), and Kellsey and Knievel (2012) studied citation patterns in various humanities fields, including classics. In their first article (Kellsey & Knievel, 2004) Finally, in their 2012 article, they examined citations from 28 monographs published by humanities faculty members with the goal of determining how these scholars accessed the materials they used.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%