The structural characteristics of the Japanese paperback book series Shinsho

Background. Books constitute an important and dominant part of the knowledge infrastructure. It is generally held that the form, structural characteristics, and symbolic characteristics of books influence how they are read and how they are understood. Nevertheless, a systematic study of these charac...

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Main Authors: Shimura, Ruri, Yamada, Shohei, Umino, Bin, Toda, Shin'ichi, Kageura, Kyo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154328
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1543282021-12-22T20:11:04Z The structural characteristics of the Japanese paperback book series Shinsho Shimura, Ruri Yamada, Shohei Umino, Bin Toda, Shin'ichi Kageura, Kyo Library and information science Background. Books constitute an important and dominant part of the knowledge infrastructure. It is generally held that the form, structural characteristics, and symbolic characteristics of books influence how they are read and how they are understood. Nevertheless, a systematic study of these characteristics of books has yet to be carried out fully. Objectives. Focusing on the Japanese paperback book series Shinsho, whose mission is generally defined as making authentic knowledge available to lay readers, we surveyed the structural characteristics of books, i.e. the depth of the segments (chapter, section, subsection, etc.), the density of segments, how segments are numbered and/or titled, and how the structure of books are represented in the table of contents. We describe the overall characteristics, the chronological changes in these characteristics since 1940, and the association between these characteristics and the subject content of the book. Results. It was observed that as time passed, the density of segments increased in general and converged to the current standard, which consists of three levels of segments (chapter, section, and subsection), among which the top two levels are indicated in the table of contents. Books that deal with literature, however, have a significantly lower density of segments. Contribution. This study has shown that the structure of Shinsho has changed in the past 70 years. This shed light on how our knowledge infrastructure has been arranged and has changed in a relatively short duration within which we tend to overlook changes. Published version 2021-12-17T04:35:20Z 2021-12-17T04:35:20Z 2017 Journal Article Shimura, R., Yamada, S., Umino, B., Toda, S. & Kageura, K. (2017). The structural characteristics of the Japanese paperback book series Shinsho. Library and Information Science Research E-Journal, 27(1), 26-38. https://dx.doi.org/10.32655/LIBRES.2017.1.3 1058-6768 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154328 10.32655/LIBRES.2017.1.3 1 27 26 38 en Library and Information Science Research E-Journal © 2018 Ruri Shimura, Shohei Yamada, Bin Umino, Shin'ichi Toda, Kyo Kageura. All rights reserved. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Library and information science
spellingShingle Library and information science
Shimura, Ruri
Yamada, Shohei
Umino, Bin
Toda, Shin'ichi
Kageura, Kyo
The structural characteristics of the Japanese paperback book series Shinsho
description Background. Books constitute an important and dominant part of the knowledge infrastructure. It is generally held that the form, structural characteristics, and symbolic characteristics of books influence how they are read and how they are understood. Nevertheless, a systematic study of these characteristics of books has yet to be carried out fully. Objectives. Focusing on the Japanese paperback book series Shinsho, whose mission is generally defined as making authentic knowledge available to lay readers, we surveyed the structural characteristics of books, i.e. the depth of the segments (chapter, section, subsection, etc.), the density of segments, how segments are numbered and/or titled, and how the structure of books are represented in the table of contents. We describe the overall characteristics, the chronological changes in these characteristics since 1940, and the association between these characteristics and the subject content of the book. Results. It was observed that as time passed, the density of segments increased in general and converged to the current standard, which consists of three levels of segments (chapter, section, and subsection), among which the top two levels are indicated in the table of contents. Books that deal with literature, however, have a significantly lower density of segments. Contribution. This study has shown that the structure of Shinsho has changed in the past 70 years. This shed light on how our knowledge infrastructure has been arranged and has changed in a relatively short duration within which we tend to overlook changes.
format Article
author Shimura, Ruri
Yamada, Shohei
Umino, Bin
Toda, Shin'ichi
Kageura, Kyo
author_facet Shimura, Ruri
Yamada, Shohei
Umino, Bin
Toda, Shin'ichi
Kageura, Kyo
author_sort Shimura, Ruri
title The structural characteristics of the Japanese paperback book series Shinsho
title_short The structural characteristics of the Japanese paperback book series Shinsho
title_full The structural characteristics of the Japanese paperback book series Shinsho
title_fullStr The structural characteristics of the Japanese paperback book series Shinsho
title_full_unstemmed The structural characteristics of the Japanese paperback book series Shinsho
title_sort structural characteristics of the japanese paperback book series shinsho
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154328
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