@article{pflanzer_dubljevic_bauer_orcutt_list_singh_2023, title={Embedding AI in society: ethics, policy, governance, and impacts}, volume={6}, ISSN={["1435-5655"]}, DOI={10.1007/s00146-023-01704-2}, journal={AI & SOCIETY}, author={Pflanzer, Michael and Dubljevic, Veljko and Bauer, William A. A. and Orcutt, Darby and List, George and Singh, Munindar P. P.}, year={2023}, month={Jun} } @article{mulvey_joy_caslin_orcutt_eseryel_katti_2021, title={Forests After Florence: an informal community-engaged STEM research project promotes STEM identity in disaster-impacted students}, volume={6}, ISSN={["1470-1138"]}, url={https://doi.org/10.1080/02635143.2021.1944077}, DOI={10.1080/02635143.2021.1944077}, abstractNote={ABSTRACT Background Natural disasters, such as hurricanes, can have lasting impacts on a community Purpose This research evaluated how participation in an STEM education intervention after an ecological disaster affected students’ persistence, resilience, and STEM identity Sample Hurricane Florence impacted college students (N = 50) were recruited Design and Methods Participants completed pre-test, post-test and daily diary measures before, during and after they completed an intervention where they collected forestry data in their home hurricane-impacted communities Results Participants reported higher STEM identity following the intervention learning experience. Daily interest and enjoyment in science was higher on days when they reported more positive experiences. For resilience, for male students, but not female students, the learning opportunity fostered resilience. Male students reported higher STEM identity on days when they reported more positive learning experiences Conclusion These findings highlight the benefit of STEM education learning opportunities, particular for disaster-impacted students.}, journal={RESEARCH IN SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGICAL EDUCATION}, author={Mulvey, Kelly Lynn and Joy, Angelina and Caslin, Michael and Orcutt, Darby and Eseryel, Deniz and Katti, Madhusudan}, year={2021}, month={Jun} } @article{can informal learning help promote science identity and learning in college students impacted by climate change disasters?_2020, DOI={10.6084/m9.figshare.11916759.v1}, journal={figshare}, year={2020} } @article{can informal learning help promote science identity and learning in college students impacted by climate change disasters?_2020, DOI={10.6084/m9.figshare.11916759}, journal={figshare}, year={2020} } @article{forests after florence: application of 360° photography and oral history to document hurricane impacts on urban forests and communities in coastal north carolina_2020, DOI={10.6084/m9.figshare.11908011.v1}, journal={figshare}, year={2020} } @article{forests after florence: application of 360° photography and oral history to document hurricane impacts on urban forests and communities in coastal north carolina_2020, DOI={10.6084/m9.figshare.11908011}, journal={figshare}, year={2020} } @article{is science for me? promoting science identity following climate change disasters in college students_2020, DOI={10.6084/m9.figshare.11908338.v1}, journal={figshare}, year={2020} } @article{is science for me? promoting science identity following climate change disasters in college students_2020, DOI={10.6084/m9.figshare.11908338}, journal={figshare}, year={2020} } @article{orcutt_2018, title={Reviews in Brief: Charleston Briefings: Trending Topics for Information Professionals}, volume={43}, ISSN={["1545-2549"]}, DOI={10.1080/01462679.2017.1412693}, abstractNote={"Reviews in Brief: Charleston Briefings: Trending Topics for Information Professionals. www.charlestonbriefings.com." Collection Management, 43(1), p. 78}, number={1}, journal={COLLECTION MANAGEMENT}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2018}, pages={78–78} } @article{the efficiency expert_2018, journal={Against the Grain}, year={2018}, month={Nov} } @article{orcutt_jefferies_wust_2017, title={Ein lohnendes Unterfangen und neue Herausforderungen. Videospiele: Bestände und Services der NCSU Libraries” [A Worthwhile Endeavour and New Challenges. Video Games: Holdings and Services at NCSU Libraries]}, volume={11}, journal={BuB - Forum Bibliothek und Information}, author={Orcutt, Darby and Jefferies, Jason and Wust, Markus}, year={2017}, pages={606–610} } @article{orcutt_2017, title={Liaisonship, the Law, & Libraries: Supporting Content Mining Research}, volume={29}, url={https://against-the-grain.com/2017/10/v29-4-liaisonship-the-law-libraries-supporting-content-mining-research/}, number={4}, journal={Against the Grain}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2017}, month={Sep}, pages={26–27} } @article{orcutt_2017, title={Reviews-in-Brief}, volume={42}, DOI={10.1080/01462679.2017.1319241}, number={2}, journal={Collection Management}, publisher={Informa UK Limited}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2017}, month={Apr}, pages={120–121} } @inproceedings{cooper_mccracken_orcutt_rotenberg_2017, title={Rolling With the Wheels of Commerce: The Challenges of Business and Industry- Based Resources}, DOI={10.5703/1288284316446}, abstractNote={Collections and liaison librarians receive requests for specialized resources that may require use of passwords or other mediated access, local hosting, or special software. Sometimes, although not always, these resources are used in a business or industry setting, and their subscription and licensing processes do not follow typical academic library acquisitions patterns. Librarians may also receive requests for raw data that is part of a subscribed resource. How do librarians respond to these user needs? How do vendors make decisions about which products to bring to the academic library market? The authors present views on these issues and options to consider.}, booktitle={"Roll With the Times, or the Times Roll Over You"}, publisher={Purdue University Press}, author={Cooper, Natasha and McCracken, Peter and Orcutt, Darby and Rotenberg, Ellen}, year={2017} } @inproceedings{orcutt_waller_warren_2017, title={What Are Subject Liaisons When “Collections” and “Subjects” Don’t Matter?}, url={http://docs.lib.purdue.edu/charleston/2016/prodev/4/}, DOI={10.5703/1288284316478}, abstractNote={In this interactive lively lunch discussion, participants explored issues around how the traditional subject liaison role is evolving. Users increasingly require functional information support (e.g., for geographic information system (GIS) or data mining) rather than simply domain-specific. At the same time, reports from the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) Pilot Library Liaison Institute and others have noted self-conscious trends toward developing liaison roles that engage and support the full research life cycle, as opposed to traditional service models focused on building and promoting library collections as more or less fixed products. Hosts Darby Orcutt, Mira Waller, and Scott Warren outlined some the major theme surrounding the future of these new roles and with participants explored questions that include: What does it mean to be a collections librarian in this new world? What new skills do we need to develop? What old skills should we not lose? How do we adapt both our institutions and our individual staff without sacrificing our (or their) very identities? Lively Lunch Discussion The lively lunch began with Waller providing a brief introduction and a call for attendees to actively engage in the discussion around how the traditional subject liaison role is currently evolving and what the future holds post transformation. The following questions were provided to participants at the start of the discussion to provide food for thought throughout the session: • What are the sacred cows around liaisons? • Do you expect your current role to continue as is? Is it already changing? • Do you see yourself as a deep expert, generalist, or functional specialist? • How important are spaces to your current role? To your library as a whole? • When are too many disparate skill sets too many? Too many subjects? • What are the trade-offs when we chase the latest trends? • Where do liaisons sit in your organizational structure? Where should they? Waller ended the introduction by taking a straw poll of the room to get a sense of how many attendees were at institutions that had already begun changing or modifying the responsibilities of these roles. Many of the attendees raised their hands. Waller then turned over facilitation to Warren, who took participants on a deeper dive into the concept of the subject liaison librarian identity. Warren began by noting how that the central identity of subject librarians has become more fluid and perhaps even transitional in recent years. A once stable and common understanding that the role encompassed working with a small number of disciplines, building collections, teaching information literacy sessions, and staffing a reference desk can no longer be assumed. In part this is the because the former common identity originated in a print-based world predicated upon the need to provide faculty with easy access to print journals and books. However, online journals have overwhelmingly replaced print, many branch libraries oriented around departments have been consolidated within larger interdisciplinary libraries, and far fewer subject librarians staff reference desks as service models have shifted. Perhaps most importantly, there has been a steady amalgamation of areas to which subject librarians liaise. Taken collectively, these changes raise many challenging questions that touch on aspects of professional identity.}, booktitle={"Roll With the Times, or the Times Roll Over You"}, publisher={Purdue University Press}, author={Orcutt, Darby and Waller, Mira and Warren, Scott}, year={2017} } @misc{orcutt_wiseman_2016, title={A library book for bear}, volume={41}, number={4}, journal={Journal of Collection Management}, author={Orcutt, D. and Wiseman, A.}, year={2016}, pages={236–240} } @article{orcutt_wiseman_2016, title={A library book for bear}, volume={41}, number={4}, journal={Journal of Collection Management}, author={Orcutt, D. and Wiseman, A.}, year={2016}, pages={236–240} } @inproceedings{tebbe_orcutt_2016, title={Aligning Collections With Emerging Needs in Research Informatics}, DOI={10.5703/1288284316298}, abstractNote={Some of the North Carolina State University (NCSU) Libraries’ largest investments are in collections, digital library development, and technology‐rich collaborative spaces. The goal of the NCSU Libraries Fellows Program initiative, "Aligning Collections with Emerging Needs in Research Informatics," is to ensure these areas leverage one another to the benefit of our users in support of emerging research informatics needs through licensing and acquisition of new data sources, as well as leveraging the capabilities of new high‐tech library spaces. Over its two years, this initiative seeks to address and mainstream subject specialists’ and selectors’ consideration of high‐tech research informatics needs of users. Early accomplishments of the initiative include content mining agreements, increased awareness of scholarly APIs, and an ontology to describe research informatics. Ongoing work includes an investigation of relevant collections, licensing terms, and the landscape of the current marketplace; an environmental scan of NCSU research and teaching contexts that would benefit from greater availability of content as data for computational purposes; how‐to documentation and training for more technologically sophisticated uses of existing resources; negotiations of select licenses to allow for more flexibility of content use; and revision of our website to promote the research informatics capacities of the Libraries’ collections to our users.}, booktitle={Where Do We Go From Here? Charleston Conference Proceedings 2015}, publisher={Purdue University Press}, author={Tebbe, Heidi J. and Orcutt, Darby}, year={2016} } @inproceedings{orcutt_2016, title={BAM: The Basic Access Model for Content Mining Agreements}, DOI={10.5703/1288284316247}, abstractNote={The Basic Access Model (BAM) provides a reasonable and practical framework of business terms for libraries and vendors to agree on how to facilitate user access to digital content for content mining purposes, as well as a principled and agreed upon industry foundation for future cooperation. BAM has already opened up significant content for mining access. The sooner we can open up our collections—both as libraries and as vendors—to the new and emerging tools and methods of content mining researchers, the more relevant we and our collections will be.}, booktitle={Where Do We Go From Here? Charleston Conference Proceedings 2015}, publisher={Purdue University Press}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2016} } @misc{orcutt_wiseman_2016, title={Bats at thelibrary}, volume={41}, number={4}, journal={Journal of Collection Management}, author={Orcutt, D. and Wiseman, A.}, year={2016}, pages={236–240} } @article{orcutt_wiseman_2016, title={Bats at thelibrary}, volume={41}, number={4}, journal={Journal of Collection Management}, author={Orcutt, D. and Wiseman, A.}, year={2016}, pages={236–240} } @inproceedings{cross_orcutt_2016, title={Don’t Share This Item! Developing Digital Collections and Services in a Consumer‐Licensed World}, DOI={10.5703/1288284316327}, abstractNote={Libraries have always faced unique challenges in providing non‐academic content for academic use, but the digital age has brought particular problems of “one size fits all” consumer purchase models and vexing methods of digital rights management (DRM), wrapped up with a large bow of legal uncertainty for many institutions. These proceedings describe some practices for sharing consumer‐licensed popular materials and confronting legal and technical barriers, as well as what some libraries are considering and encountering in applying the law, fair use, user expectations, and common sense in developing collections and services around digital content that is geared directly to end users. Digital Collections in a Consumer‐Licensed World Libraries have always faced unique challenges in providing non‐academic content for academic use, but the digital age has brought particular problems of “one size fits all” consumer purchase models and vexing methods of DRM, wrapped up with a large bow of legal uncertainty for many institutions. Traditional multimedia content including film and television is increasingly consumed through streaming services (e.g., Netflix, Hulu, and Amazon), and libraries naturally want to enter this space, both because streaming services offer convenience and are often most familiar to patrons. Further, many films and programs are available first or exclusively through proprietary streaming services, including award‐ winning and culturally significant productions; for example, Netflix’s drama House of Cards and Amazon’s Emmy‐ and Golden Globe‐winning Transparent. Collecting new media such as video games raises similar issues, with an increasing number of games available exclusively as digital downloads through Steam or similar services. This trend toward digital and proprietary formats is likely to continue and increase over time, which will leave libraries unable to collect multimedia materials if they cannot engage with these services. Unfortunately, most of these services are designed for consumer use and present logistical and legal challenges for libraries hoping to share materials with their patrons. The traditional legal protections of first sale and section 108 are, at best, an uncomfortable fit and at times are simply not applicable to consumer‐licensed products. These proceedings document the discussion at the 2015 Charleston Conference about these issues. Current Library Contexts Few librarian participants in this session indicated that their institutions were currently providing such consumer‐oriented media. Several cited extremely risk‐adverse legal counsel as a major institutional barrier, some a perceived lack of need or legitimacy of such media, and some concerns about budgeting funds or staff time to such collections. This latter concern, of staff time, is especially important. These media artifacts are often device‐ specific, thus requiring that both device and associated media content be circulated or made available within a designated space. Because of the consumer‐oriented nature of the content platforms, these media often must be either purchased separately and then “gifted” to an account for user access, or if the vendor does not allow for “gifting,” a secure means of hiding library account or credit card information and blocking unauthorized activity must be determined (typically, use of “parental controls”). Thus, consumer‐oriented systems must be Copyright of this contribution remains in the name of the author(s). http://dx.doi.org/10.5703/1288284316327 Techie Issues 616 carefully reengineered to serve library needs, and the workflows for providing such content are sometimes cumbersome, nearly always unique to the platform and vendor at hand, and may require periodic refreshing as interfaces change (often with little advance notice).}, booktitle={Where Do We Go From Here? Charleston Conference Proceedings 2015}, publisher={Purdue University Press}, author={Cross, William M. and Orcutt, Darby}, year={2016} } @misc{orcutt_wiseman_2016, title={How the library (Not the Prince) saved Rapunzel}, volume={41}, number={4}, journal={Journal of Collection Management}, author={Orcutt, D. and Wiseman, A.}, year={2016}, pages={236–240} } @article{orcutt_wiseman_2016, title={How the library (Not the Prince) saved Rapunzel}, volume={41}, number={4}, journal={Journal of Collection Management}, author={Orcutt, D. and Wiseman, A.}, year={2016}, pages={236–240} } @misc{orcutt_wiseman_2016, title={Max and Zoe at the library}, volume={41}, number={4}, journal={Journal of Collection Management}, author={Orcutt, D. and Wiseman, A.}, year={2016}, pages={236–240} } @article{orcutt_wiseman_2016, title={Max and Zoe at the library}, volume={41}, number={4}, journal={Journal of Collection Management}, author={Orcutt, D. and Wiseman, A.}, year={2016}, pages={236–240} } @misc{orcutt_wiseman_2016, title={Pomodoro Penguin and the Library Lemur}, volume={41}, number={4}, journal={Journal of Collection Management}, author={Orcutt, D. and Wiseman, A.}, year={2016}, pages={236–240} } @article{orcutt_wiseman_2016, title={Pomodoro Penguin and the Library Lemur}, volume={41}, number={4}, journal={Journal of Collection Management}, author={Orcutt, D. and Wiseman, A.}, year={2016}, pages={236–240} } @article{orcutt_2016, title={Reviews-in-Brief: Collecting Guides}, volume={41}, DOI={10.1080/01462679.2016.1203234}, number={3}, journal={Collection Management}, publisher={Informa UK Limited}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2016}, month={Jul}, pages={187–187} } @article{orcutt_2016, title={Reviews-in-Brief: Related Subjects of Interest}, volume={41}, DOI={10.1080/01462679.2016.1130540}, number={1}, journal={Collection Management}, publisher={Informa UK Limited}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2016}, month={Jan}, pages={46–47} } @article{orcutt_wiseman_2016, title={Special Review Section: Children's Picturebooks About Libraries}, volume={41}, ISSN={0146-2679 1545-2549}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01462679.2016.1249991}, DOI={10.1080/01462679.2016.1249991}, abstractNote={ABSTRACT As librarians, and especially collections-focused librarians, we almost daily face misperceptions and misunderstandings of libraries, of our work, and of the collections and services that we provide. From outdated ideas, to stereotypes, to incomplete images of the realities and value of our institutions and our profession, these representations may pose constant challenges and consternation. In this special review section, my colleague Dr. Angela Wiseman, Associate Professor of Education and an expert on children's books, joins me in reviewing a sampling of current children's books about libraries.}, number={4}, journal={Collection Management}, publisher={Informa UK Limited}, author={Orcutt, Darby and Wiseman, Angela}, year={2016}, month={Oct}, pages={236–240} } @inproceedings{herther_dollar_orcutt_wise_white_2016, title={Text and Data Mining Contracts: The Issues and Needs}, DOI={10.5703/1288284316233}, abstractNote={Follow this and additional works at: http://docs.lib.purdue.edu/charleston An indexed, print copy of the Proceedings is also available for purchase at: http://www.thepress.purdue.edu/series/ charleston. You may also be interested in the new series, Charleston Insights in Library, Archival, and Information Sciences. Find out more at: http://www.thepress.purdue.edu/series/charleston-insights-library-archival-and-information-sciences.}, booktitle={Where Do We Go From Here? Charleston Conference Proceedings 2015}, publisher={Purdue University Press}, author={Herther, Nancy and Dollar, Daniel and Orcutt, Darby and Wise, Alicia and White, Meg}, year={2016} } @inproceedings{orcutt_2016, title={The User‐Driven Collection 4.0: The Next Phase in User‐Driven Monographic Acquisition}, DOI={10.5703/1288284316286}, abstractNote={For more than a decade, the North Carolina State University (NCSU) Libraries has had some level of user-driven collecting. Periodically building upon the success of these programs, which has often entailed pushing vendor and library systems beyond their current capacities, the Libraries is now poised to move most of our monographic selection into user‐driven pools.}, booktitle={Where Do We Go From Here? Charleston Conference Proceedings 2015}, publisher={Purdue University Press}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2016} } @article{comics unmasked: art and anarchy in the uk_2015, volume={52}, DOI={10.5860/choice.186972}, abstractNote={It may come as a surprise that comics offer much more than meets the eye. Of course we all have happy memories of favourite childhood reading (Beano, Dandy, Eagle, Mad, Viz - the list is endless). But how aware are we that there is something inherently anarchic about comics? A huge variety have been produced over the centuries by British creators. It is a strong tradition that continues today. Some of the biggest names in comics - Alan Moore (Watchmen, V for Vendetta), Neil Gaiman (Sandman), Mark Millar (Kick-Ass) and Grant Morrison (Batman: Arkham Asylum) - are featured in this visually stimulating book (which accompanies a major exhibition at the British Library). But there are many, many more. And it is the diversity of content and form, as well as comics' ongoing relevance, which is a main focus. The seditious aspects of the comics tradition - adult, underground and 'alternative' material - is highlighted, alongside the superheroes who still dominate the scene. There is anarchy everywhere that you look!}, number={06}, journal={Choice Reviews Online}, publisher={American Library Association}, year={2015}, month={Jan}, pages={52–2865-52–2865} } @article{orcutt_2015, title={Library Support for Text and Data Mining}, volume={39}, number={3}, journal={Online Searcher}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2015}, month={Jun}, pages={27–30} } @article{orcutt_2015, title={Reviews-in-Brief: "Guide to Reference in Genealogy and Biography"; "The Origin of Printing in Two Essays"; and "Preserving Our Heritage: Perspectives from Antiquity to the Digital Age"}, volume={40}, DOI={10.1080/01462679.2015.1050945}, number={3}, journal={Collection Management}, publisher={Informa UK Limited}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2015}, month={Jul}, pages={193–194} } @article{orcutt_2015, title={Reviews-in-Brief: Books Worth a Quick Glance (If That)}, volume={40}, DOI={10.1080/01462679.2015.1102595}, number={4}, journal={Collection Management}, publisher={Informa UK Limited}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2015}, month={Oct}, pages={242–243} } @article{orcutt_2015, title={Reviews-in-Brief: “Annual Review of Cultural Heritage Informatics, 2012-2013”; “Collecting the Contemporary: A Handbook for Social History Museums”; “Management”; and “Rare Books and Special Collections”}, volume={40}, DOI={10.1080/01462679.2015.982061}, number={1}, journal={Collection Management}, publisher={Informa UK Limited}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2015}, month={Jan}, pages={63–64} } @article{orcutt_2015, title={Writing Reviews for Collection Management : A Note from the Reviews Editor}, volume={40}, DOI={10.1080/01462679.2015.1050947}, number={3}, journal={Collection Management}, publisher={Informa UK Limited}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2015}, month={Jul}, pages={125–126} } @article{comics: a global history, 1968 to the present (comics)_2014, volume={52}, DOI={10.5860/choice.52-0662}, abstractNote={This is the first global history of comics from 1968 through to the present day, arranged chronologically and richly illustrated with prime examples of the artists, styles and movements being discussed. The authors contextualize the crucial modern period within the art forms broader history and offer a description of the more fluid, international and digital scene that is the mediums likely future. They supply examples from around the world including the US and UK, France, Spain, Belgium, Italy, Germany, Switzerland, Argentina, Japan, South Korea and New Zealand and from a range of renowned and lesser-known artists.}, number={02}, journal={Choice Reviews Online}, publisher={American Library Association}, year={2014}, month={Sep}, pages={52–0662-52–0662} } @misc{orcutt_2014, place={Greenwood}, title={Deadpool}, volume={IV}, journal={Comics Through Time}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2014}, pages={1439–1441} } @misc{orcutt_2014, place={Greenwood}, title={Religion}, volume={II}, journal={Comics Through Time}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2014}, pages={745–748} } @article{orcutt_2014, title={Reviews-in-Brief: “The Johns Hopkins Guide to Digital Media”; “A New Republic of Letters: Memory and Scholarship in the Age of Digital Reproduction”; and “Records & Information Management”}, volume={39}, DOI={10.1080/01462679.2014.945364}, abstractNote={is able to stand on its own. Relevant research is effectively incorporated throughout the text, referencing over 30 pages of sources included at the back of the book. Overall, the author provides an excellent ready reference tool for the busy librarian needing a quick introduction or refresher on a broad array of topics. Keep in mind, however, that this snapshot of the rapidly shifting landscape of librarianship no doubt has an expiration date, for the author’s final words are telling: “This work will never be finished.” There is plenty here that should be of interest to collections professionals, particularly those new to the field or who only devote a portion of their time to collections. Seasoned collections professionals will also find it useful to not only inform their collections activities but also broaden their awareness and understanding of the changing dynamics in libraries that are, or should be, impacting those activities.}, number={4}, journal={Collection Management}, publisher={Informa UK Limited}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2014}, month={Sep}, pages={301–302} } @misc{orcutt_2014, place={Greenwood}, title={Spider-man}, volume={IV}, journal={Comics Through Time}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2014}, pages={1761–1763} } @article{orcutt_2014, title={The Book Publishing Industry, 3rd edition}, volume={51}, DOI={10.5860/choice.51-2970}, number={6}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2014}, pages={973} } @article{orcutt_2014, title={The Book Publishing Industry, 3rd edition}, volume={51}, number={6}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2014}, pages={973} } @article{orcutt_2014, title={The Praeger Handbook of Media Literacy}, volume={51}, DOI={10.5860/choice.51-4774}, abstractNote={This groundbreaking two-volume set provides readers with the information they need to grasp new developments in the swiftly evolving field of media literacy.}, number={9}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2014}, pages={1566} } @article{orcutt_2014, title={The Praeger Handbook of Media Literacy}, volume={51}, number={9}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2014}, pages={1566} } @article{the south carolina encyclopedia guide to south carolina writers_2014, volume={51}, DOI={10.5860/choice.51-6495}, number={12}, journal={Choice Reviews Online}, publisher={American Library Association}, year={2014}, month={Jul}, pages={51–6495-51–6495} } @misc{orcutt_2014, place={Greenwood}, title={The Walking Dead}, volume={IV}, journal={Comics Through Time}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2014}, pages={1815–1817} } @misc{orcutt_2014, title={The spectrum of cognition in The Walking Dead}, journal={Media Res: A MediaCommons Project}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2014} } @article{orcutt_2014, title={The spectrum of cognition in The Walking Dead}, journal={Media Res: A MediaCommons Project}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2014} } @misc{orcutt_2014, title={Who's Who in Research: Film Studies; Media Studies; Visual Arts; Performing Arts; Cultural Studies}, volume={51}, number={4}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2014}, pages={604–605} } @article{orcutt_2014, title={Who's Who in Research: Film Studies; Media Studies; Visual Arts; Performing Arts; Cultural Studies}, volume={51}, number={4}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2014}, pages={604–605} } @article{orcutt_2013, title={Critical Survey of Graphic Novels: Manga}, volume={50}, DOI={10.5860/choice.50-6496}, number={12}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2013}, pages={2196} } @article{orcutt_2013, title={Critical Survey of Graphic Novels: Manga}, volume={50}, number={12}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2013}, pages={2196} } @article{orcutt_2013, title={The graphic canon: From the Epic of Gilgamesh to Shakespeare to Dangerous Liaisons}, volume={50}, DOI={10.5860/choice.50-3049}, number={6}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2013}, pages={1033} } @article{orcutt_2013, title={The graphic canon: From the Epic of Gilgamesh to Shakespeare to Dangerous Liaisons}, volume={50}, number={6}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2013}, pages={1033} } @article{orcutt_2013, title={The meaning of superhero comics}, volume={50}, DOI={10.5860/choice.50-3091}, number={6}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2013}, pages={1042} } @article{orcutt_2013, title={The meaning of superhero comics}, volume={50}, number={6}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2013}, pages={1042} } @article{orcutt_2012, title={Critical Approaches to Comics: Theories and Methods}, volume={49}, DOI={10.5860/choice.49-6702}, number={12}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2012}, pages={2270–2271} } @article{orcutt_2012, title={Critical Approaches to Comics: Theories and Methods}, volume={49}, number={12}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2012}, pages={2270–2271} } @article{orcutt_2012, title={Critical Survey of Graphic Novels: Independents and Underground Classics}, volume={50}, DOI={10.5860/choice.50-1204}, number={3}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2012}, pages={444–445} } @article{orcutt_2012, title={Critical Survey of Graphic Novels: Independents and Underground Classics}, volume={50}, number={3}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2012}, pages={444–445} } @article{orcutt_2012, title={Encyclopedia of Sacred Places}, volume={50}, DOI={10.5860/choice.50-1811}, abstractNote={Now thoroughly revised and updated, this encyclopedia documents the diversity of shrines, temples, holy places, and pilgrimage sites sacred to the world's major religious traditions, and illustrates their elemental place in human culture. * Over 300 A-Z entries covering sites and pilgrimages sacred to the world's major religious traditions * Illustrative photographs and maps * A glossary of relevant terms * Appendices listing sites by country, faith tradition, and placement in the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites}, number={4}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2012}, pages={637} } @article{orcutt_2012, title={Encyclopedia of Sacred Places}, volume={50}, number={4}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2012}, pages={637} } @article{orcutt_2012, title={Grant Morrison: Combining the Worlds of Contemporary Comics}, volume={49}, DOI={10.5860/choice.49-6707}, number={12}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt}, year={2012}, pages={2271–2272} } @article{orcutt_2012, title={Grant Morrison: Combining the Worlds of Contemporary Comics}, volume={49}, number={12}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt}, year={2012}, pages={2271–2272} } @article{orcutt_2012, title={Graphic Novels and Comics in Libraries and Archives: Essays on Readers, Research, History, and Cataloging.}, volume={56}, ISSN={["0024-2527"]}, DOI={10.5860/lrts.56n2.116}, number={2}, journal={LIBRARY RESOURCES & TECHNICAL SERVICES}, publisher={American Library Association}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2012}, month={Apr}, pages={116–117} } @article{orcutt_2012, title={Graphic novels and comics in libraries and archives: Essays on readers, research, history, and cataloging}, volume={56}, number={2}, journal={Library Resources & Technical Services}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2012}, pages={116–117} } @inproceedings{orcutt_o'gara_2012, title={Looking Forward by Looking Back: Books at the End of the Book}, DOI={10.5703/1288284314831}, abstractNote={Follow this and additional works at: https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/charleston An indexed, print copy of the Proceedings is also available for purchase at: http://www.thepress.purdue.edu/series/charleston. You may also be interested in the new series, Charleston Insights in Library, Archival, and Information Sciences. Find out more at: http://www.thepress.purdue.edu/series/charleston-insights-library-archivaland-information-sciences.}, booktitle={Anything Goes}, publisher={Purdue University Press}, author={Orcutt, Darby and O'Gara, Genya}, year={2012}, month={Aug}, pages={117–124} } @inproceedings{orcutt_2012, title={Mainstreaming Media: Innovating Media Collections at the NCSU Libraries}, DOI={10.5703/1288284314945}, abstractNote={The Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) predicates its "Guidelines for Media Resources in Academic Libraries" on assumptions that general principles of collection management and library service apply equally to media formats (http://ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/standards/mediaresources.cfm). Yet, implicit in ACRL's Guidelines is the additional (and perhaps contradictory) assumption that, to be effective, academic library media collections and services must form a separately administered "program," headed by a single librarian. At The North Carolina State University (NCSU) Libraries, we have instead chosen to administer our many media collections and services using the same structures we use for those of other formats, interweaving media into the very fabric of the NCSU Libraries' collections and services. While they sometimes pose particular challenges, media are increasingly present and significant in our collections, and "mainstreaming" them – dealing with them as a holistic part of our already diverse portfolio of formats – has meant tremendous benefits for budget, workflow and user experience. As the unofficial "coordinator" of media collections for a decade (one of many hats!), I offer a quick review of our many collections and service points, including: a "media center" that is now integrated into the library's main circulation desk, an open-shelf circulating DVD collection, video game collections, and a vast and growing collection of online films (both vendorand library-hosted, and many of which are not owned anywhere else in streaming format). Our media collections and approaches to providing them are equally forward-thinking. I am and I am not a media librarian. At The NCSU Libraries, we do not have a dedicated media librarian, as do probably most of our research library peers. Instead, we have chosen to thoroughly integrate media collections and services into the core of what we do, offering videos as just other formats through which information is found and delivered. Our subject selectors are our media selectors, and we do not budget separately for media by format, any more than we would budget separately for hardcover versus paperback books. The Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) predicates its "Guidelines for Media Resources in Academic Libraries" on assumptions that general principles of collection management and library service apply equally to media formats. Yet, implicit in ACRL's Guidelines is the additional (and perhaps contradictory) assumption that, to be effective, academic library media collections and services must form a separately administered "program," headed by a single librarian. It is certainly important to have staff who are knowledgeable and attentive to special issues surrounding video formats, and who communicate with each other well. I am the unofficial "coordinator" of media collections, and my colleague Tripp Reade, Interim Associate Head of Access & Delivery Services, coordinates the more public services end of things. Each of us brings particular ideas and expertise coming from our respective collections and access services perspectives. For many years, we still devoted physical space to a separate media center, with a service desk manned by support staff and students, but fiscal realities, space needs, and the desire to improve services led us to dismantle it. For example, our main library stayed open 24 hours, but media services were available only until 10pm each evening. We have been able to convert the old media center spaces into a very nice lounge, study area, and reserve-able tutoring room. The video collection itself now largely lives as a Teaching Collection, physically located behind our main circulation desk. Fulfilling our core historic mission with regard to video, the main goal of the Teaching Collection is to support course-related teaching needs. To help keep DVDs in working order and available for classroom use, circulation continues to be somewhat limited. We've retained the same circulation policies as before for instructors,}, booktitle={Something's Gotta Give}, publisher={Purdue University Press}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2012}, month={Sep}, pages={450–452} } @inproceedings{norberg_orcutt_vickery_2012, title={New Tricks for Old Data Sources: Mashups, Visualizations, & Questions Your ILS Has Been Afraid to Answer}, DOI={10.5703/1288284314899}, abstractNote={Follow this and additional works at: https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/charleston An indexed, print copy of the Proceedings is also available for purchase at: http://www.thepress.purdue.edu/series/charleston. You may also be interested in the new series, Charleston Insights in Library, Archival, and Information Sciences. Find out more at: http://www.thepress.purdue.edu/series/charleston-insights-library-archivaland-information-sciences.}, booktitle={Something's Gotta Give}, publisher={Purdue University Press}, author={Norberg, Brian and Orcutt, Darby and Vickery, John}, year={2012}, month={Sep}, pages={199–213} } @article{orcutt_2011, title={Convergence Culture}, volume={48}, number={10}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2011}, month={Jun}, pages={1846} } @inproceedings{orcutt_2011, title={Mainstreaming media: Innovating media collections at the NCSU Libraries}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2011}, pages={450–452} } @article{orcutt_norberg_vickery_2011, title={New tricks for old data sources: Mashups, visualizations, & questions your ILS has been afraid to answer}, journal={Something's Gotta Give: Proceedings of the Charleston Conference 2011}, author={Orcutt, D. and Norberg, B. and Vickery, J.}, year={2011}, pages={199–213} } @article{the wireless spectrum: the politics, practices, and poetics of mobile media_2011, volume={48}, DOI={10.5860/choice.48-2761}, abstractNote={As evidenced by the clientele in any urban coffee shop, devices such as cell phones, BlackBerries, and Wi-Fi-enabled laptops have proliferated, particularly during the past ten years. The Wireless Spectrum explores how wireless technologies have modified both individual and public life, transforming our experiences of space, time, and place, while reshaping our day-to-day interactions. Bringing together visual artists, designers, activists, and communication and humanities scholars to reflect on mobile media, this collection engages a new terrain of interdisciplinary research. Interrogating these new forms of community and communication practices as they are emerging in Canada and around the world, the essays in The Wireless Spectrum ask how these new technologies transfigure subjectivities, creating new forms of social behaviour and provocative aesthetic practices.}, number={05}, journal={Choice Reviews Online}, publisher={American Library Association}, year={2011}, month={Jan}, pages={48–2761-48–2761} } @article{the new media environment: an introduction_2011, volume={48}, DOI={10.5860/choice.48-5404}, abstractNote={Acknowledgements. 1. Introduction: Modern Life Is a Media Experience. A Tale of Two Hurricanes. What Is a Media Environment? The Importance of Changing Media Environments. The electronic media. Media in the Twenty-First Century: What Has Changed? The age of the Internet. Conclusion 2. Ownership and Control in the New Media Environment. Patterns of Media Ownership and Control. Ownership and Control of the Media: Assumptions andRealities. Alternative models of media ownership. Who owns the media? Ownership and control in a global context. Does It Matter? The Consequences of Concentration and Conglomeration. The argument for market-driven media. The argument against market-driven media. What this means today. Conclusion. 3. Media and Democracy. Introduction. Changing Media Environments and Changing DemocraticPolitics. Why nervous liberals are still with us: The enduring problem ofpropaganda. John Dewey and the reconstruction of media and democraticpolitics. Empirical research: How do media actually affect citizens? Television and the Age of Broadcast News . Politics in the New Media Environment. Conclusion. 4. Studying Popular Culture: Texts, Reception, and CulturalStudies. Introduction: Hollywood and Representations of Reality. Media Studies and the Study of Reception: A Brief History of ItsMethods and Findings. Conclusion. 5. Studying Inequalities: Class, Gender, Race, and Sexuality inMedia Studies. A Critical Perspective on Inequality in Media Studies. The Frankfurt School. Cultural studies Media studies research findings on class,gender, race, and sexuality. Gender in Media Studies Research: Are Gender Roles CulturallyReproduced? Film and gender: Issues of reception and representation. Television and gender: Issues of reception andrepresentation. Media and Race. Sexuality. Conclusion. 6. Studying Media Texts and Their Reception in the New MediaEnvironment. Transformative Images in the New Media Environment. Globalization and the new shape of media identities. Media Reception Research in the New Media Environment. Global reception in the new media environment. Gender, Race, Sexuality, and Social Class Inequality in NewMedia Reception: A New Study. New Studies: Gender and Social Class Identities in the New MediaEnvironment. Politics, Media Impact and Use, and the New MediaEnvironment Old and New Media in the Individualized Media Environment: TheNew Media Environment Is Never Just New Media Bias in old media and new. Civic engagement in the new media environment. Americans and Political Discussion: How the New MediaEnvironment Is Changing the Civic Landscape. Conclusion. 7. Conclusion. We Are Living in a Mediated Age. The Complexity of Our Relationship With the Media. Human Agency in Media Decisions and Directions. In Closing: The Case of the RFID. Index.}, number={09}, journal={Choice Reviews Online}, publisher={American Library Association}, year={2011}, month={May}, pages={48–5404-48–5404} } @article{orcutt_2010, title={100 media moments that changed America [Review]}, volume={47}, DOI={10.5860/choice.47-5469}, abstractNote={From the launching of America's first newspaper to YouTube's latest phone-videoed crime, the media has always been guilty of indulging America's obsession with controversy. This encyclopedia covers 100 events in world history from the 17th century to the present-moments that alone were major and minor, but ones that exploded in the public eye when the media stepped in. Topics covered include yellow journalism, the War of the Worlds radio broadcast, the Kennedy-Nixon debates, JFK's assassination, the Pentagon papers, and Hurricane Katrina. These are events that changed the way the media is used-not just as a tool for spreading knowledge, but as a way of shaping and influencing the opinions and reactions of America's citizens. Thanks to the media's representations of these events, history has been changed forever. From classified military plans that leaked out to the public to the first televised presidential debates to the current military tortures caught on tape, 100 Media Moments That Changed America will demonstrate not only an ever-evolving system of news reporting, but also the ways in which historical events have ignited the media to mold news in a way that resonates with America's public. This must-have reference work is ideal for journalism and history majors, as well as for interested general readers. Chapters are in chronological order, beginning with the 17th century. Each chapter starts with a brief introduction, followed by media event entries from that decade. Each entry explains the moment, and then delivers specific details regarding how the media covered the event, America's response to the coverage, and how the media changed history.}, number={10}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2010}, pages={1913} } @article{orcutt_2010, title={100 media moments that changed America [Review]}, volume={47}, number={10}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2010}, pages={1913} } @inbook{orcutt_2010, title={Comics & Religion: Theoretical Connections}, booktitle={Graven Images: Religion in Comic Books & Graphic Novels}, publisher={New York: Continuum}, author={Orcutt, D.}, editor={Lewis, A. David and Kraemer, Christine HoffEditors}, year={2010} } @article{encyclopedia of comic books and graphic novels_2010, volume={48}, DOI={10.5860/choice.48-1203}, abstractNote={The most comprehensive reference ever compiled about the rich and enduring genre of comic books and graphic novels, from their emergence in the 1930s to their late-century breakout into the mainstream. * Includes over 330 entries on comic books and their creators * Presents the work of 80 contributors-accomplished academics and librarians who are also fans of comic books and graphic novels * Offers selected bibliographic listings with the entries * Provides a comprehensive index of artists, writers, works, characters, genres, and themes}, number={03}, journal={Choice Reviews Online}, publisher={American Library Association}, year={2010}, month={Nov}, pages={48–1203-48–1203} } @book{orcutt_2010, title={Library data: Empowering practice and persuasion}, ISBN={159158826X}, publisher={Santa Barbara, CA: Libraries Unlimited}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2010} } @inproceedings{orcutt_g._2010, title={Looking forward by looking back: Books at the end of the book}, author={Orcutt, D. and G., O’Gara}, year={2010}, pages={117–124} } @article{orcutt_2010, title={Of comics and men: A cultural history of American comic books [Review]}, volume={47}, DOI={10.5860/choice.47-6069}, abstractNote={Originally published in France and long sought in English translation, Jean-Paul Gabilliet's Of Comics and Men: A Cultural History of American Comic Books documents the rise and development of the American comic book industry from the 1930s to the present. The book intertwines aesthetic issues and critical biographies with the concerns of production, distribution, and audience reception, making it one of the few interdisciplinary studies of the art form. A thorough introduction by translators and comics scholars Bart Beaty and Nick Nguyen brings the book up to date with explorations of the latest innovations, particularly the graphic novel. The book is organized into three sections: a concise history of the evolution of the comic book form in America; an overview of the distribution and consumption of American comic books, detailing specific controversies such as the creation of the Comics Code in the mid-1950s; and the problematic legitimization of the form that has occurred recently within the academy and in popular discourse. Viewing comic books from a variety of theoretical lenses, Gabilliet shows how seemingly disparate issues--creation, production, and reception--are in fact connected in ways that are not necessarily true of other art forms. Analyzing examples from a variety of genres, this book, now in English for the first time, provides a thorough landmark overview of American comic books that shed new light on this versatile art form.}, number={11}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2010}, pages={2093} } @article{orcutt_2010, title={Of comics and men: A cultural history of American comic books [Review]}, volume={47}, number={11}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2010}, pages={2093} } @article{berg_denton_nelson_balasubramanian_rahman_bailey_lindor_2010, title={This is a test citation embell will delete it}, volume={30}, number={3}, journal={Medical Decision Making}, author={Berg, B. and Denton, B. and Nelson, H. and Balasubramanian, H. and Rahman, A. and Bailey, A. and Lindor, K.}, year={2010}, pages={380–387} } @article{time: the illustrated history of the world's most influential magazine_2010, volume={48}, DOI={10.5860/choice.48-0593}, number={02}, journal={Choice Reviews Online}, publisher={American Library Association}, year={2010}, month={Oct}, pages={48–0593-48–0593} } @article{orcutt_2009, title={A complete history of American comic books [Review]}, volume={46}, DOI={10.5860/choice.46-3082}, abstractNote={This book is an updated history of the American comic book by an industry insider. You'll follow the development of comics from the first appearance of the comic book format in the Platinum Age of the 1930s to the creation of the superhero genre in the Golden Age, to the current period, where comics flourish as graphic novels and blockbuster movies. Along the way you will meet the hustlers, hucksters, hacks, and visionaries who made the American comic book what it is today. It's an exciting journey, filled with mutants, changelings, atomized scientists, gamma-ray accidents, and supernaturally empowered heroes and villains who challenge the imagination and spark the secret identities lurking within us.}, number={6}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2009}, pages={1091} } @article{orcutt_2009, title={Comic books: How the industry works [Review]}, volume={46}, DOI={10.5860/choice.46-3668}, abstractNote={Comic Books: How the Industry Works. Shirrel Rhoades. New York, NY: Peter Lang, 2008. 406 pp. $29.65 pbk. After reading this book on the comic industry by veteran magazine and comics publishing executive Shirrel Rhoades, the main impression is confusion - who is this book intended for? Judging by the back cover blurb, it seems to be primarily aimed at people interested in breaking into the comic book industry, which is fine, of course, but a lot of the information provided in this book (e.g., comic industry basics in chapter 1, comic storytelling and the superhero genre in chapters 2 and 3) is so basic one would assume that someone interested in working in the industry would already know it. Furthermore, if this is indeed intended to be an industry guide-c«m-"breaking in"-book, then a lot of other information is simply irrelevant (e.g., the parts dealing with comic history, and the detailed discussions of particular comic book storylines). This is clearly not an academic book, even though at times it appears or wants to appear to be. The book employs an academic reference system with endnotes, but virtually no references are to academic texts, and in some cases they provide only tenuous support for the author's argument. The text jumps from anecdote to anecdote, the writing frequently switches perspective mid-chapter, and it is often unclear exactly what point or argument the author is trying to make. For example, in chapter 4, "Archetypes." the author moves from Jungian theory to links between comics and folklore in what seems mostly as an attempt to justify the existence of superhero comics in the first place. The chapter is strangely disconnected from the rest of the book. At other times Rhoades, a former newspaper journalist and then Marvel Comics executive, seems to want to write a textbook. All chapters are followed by a handful of "questions for further thought," and the author uses sidebars in comic book format (speech and thought bubbles) explaining key terms or just adding "fun facts" - these things indicate a textbook aim. However, the scattershot and anecdotal approach of the book will probably limit its usefulness to students. For example, chapter 10 ("Comics go to the movies - and turn on the TV") largely consists of unsystematic industry information and production anecdotes about the Hollywood superhero movies of the last decade (the Spider-man movies, the Fantastic Four movies, and so on) and will thus date very quickly. …}, number={7}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2009}, pages={1304} } @article{orcutt_2009, title={The late age of print: Everyday book culture from consumerism to control [Review]}, volume={47}, DOI={10.5860/choice.47-0611}, abstractNote={AcknowledgmentsIntroduction: The Late Age of Print1. E-books and the Digital Future2. The Big-Box Bookstore Blues3. Bringing Bookland Online4. Literature as Life on Oprah's Book Club5. Harry Potter and the Culture of the CopyConclusion: From Consumerism to ControlNotesIndex}, number={2}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2009}, pages={276} } @article{orcutt_2009, title={Y: The last man [Review]}, number={289}, journal={SFRA Review}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2009}, pages={26} } @misc{orcutt_2008, title={A mended and broken heart: The life and love of Francis of Assisi}, volume={133}, number={17}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2008}, pages={75–75} } @article{orcutt_2008, title={A mended and broken heart: The life and love of Francis of Assisi}, volume={133}, number={17}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2008}, pages={75–75} } @article{orcutt_2008, title={Church-state issues in America today: v.1: Religion and government; v.2: Religion, family, and education; v.3: Religious convictions and practices in public life [Review]}, volume={46}, DOI={10.5860/choice.46-0219}, number={1}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2008}, pages={111} } @book{orcutt_2008, title={Convergence Culture}, url={http://rccs.usfca.edu/bookinfo.asp?ReviewID=540&BookID=389).}, publisher={Resources in Cyberculture Studies}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2008}, month={Apr} } @article{orcutt_2008, title={Convergence culture: Where old and new media collide [Review]}, journal={Resource Center for Cyberculture Studies}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2008} } @misc{orcutt_2008, title={Disciples of all nations: Pillars of world Christianity [Review]}, volume={133}, number={2}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2008}, pages={75} } @article{orcutt_2008, title={Disciples of all nations: Pillars of world Christianity [Review]}, volume={133}, number={2}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2008}, pages={75} } @article{davis_day_orcutt_2008, title={Further Reflections on the WorldCat Collection Analysis Tool}, volume={33}, ISSN={["1545-2549"]}, url={http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-70449125696&partnerID=MN8TOARS}, DOI={10.1080/01462670802045566}, abstractNote={ABSTRACT This article focuses on a recent enhancement to the WorldCat Collection Analysis tool, the Interlibrary Loan Analyses module, exploring the possibilities that this enhancement offers for strategic collection development. The study concentrates on the tool as a way to assess the impact of the recent growth at North Carolina State University in biomedicine and human medicine programs. The research contained in this article originated from a session presented at XXVII Annual Charleston Conference, which was held in Charleston, South Carolina, on November 8, 2007.}, number={3}, journal={COLLECTION MANAGEMENT}, publisher={Informa UK Limited}, author={Davis, Hilary and Day, Annette and Orcutt, Darby}, year={2008}, pages={236–245} } @inbook{orcutt_2008, title={Learning to review, reviewing to learn}, ISBN={0786435755}, booktitle={Thinking outside the book: Essays for innovative librarians}, publisher={Jefferson, NC: McFarland}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2008}, pages={247–249} } @article{orcutt_2008, title={Love on the racks: A history of American romance comics [Review]}, volume={46}, DOI={10.5860/choice.46-1306}, number={3}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2008}, pages={504} } @article{orcutt_2008, title={Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life [Review]}, volume={45}, DOI={10.5860/choice.45-4326}, number={8}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2008}, pages={1354–1355} } @inbook{orcutt_2008, title={Teaching and librarianship: A winning combination}, ISBN={0786435755}, booktitle={Thinking outside the book: Essays for innovative librarians}, publisher={Jefferson, NC: McFarland}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2008}, pages={87–89} } @misc{orcutt_2008, title={The faith of scientists in their own words}, volume={133}, number={17}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2008}, pages={74–74} } @article{orcutt_2008, title={The faith of scientists in their own words}, volume={133}, number={17}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2008}, pages={74–74} } @misc{orcutt_2008, title={The lost ark of the covenant: Solving the 2,500 year old mystery of the fabled biblical ark [Review]}, volume={133}, number={8}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2008}, pages={70–71} } @article{orcutt_2008, title={The lost ark of the covenant: Solving the 2,500 year old mystery of the fabled biblical ark [Review]}, volume={133}, number={8}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2008}, pages={70–71} } @article{orcutt_2007, title={Book Review: From A to Zine: Building a Winning Zine Collection in Your Library}, volume={51}, DOI={10.5860/lrts.51n1.74}, abstractNote={LRTS 51(1)On the other hand, Part 2 contains practical, nuts-andbolts information about using and deciphering MARC coding.The authors' intention is to "present [the reader] with the most common fields found in MARC21 bibliographic records" (63).In general they have omitted only relatively obscure fields.Part 2 consists of four chapters, each devoted to fields that serve the same function (for example, all the "indexed" or "heading" fields are discussed in Chapter 7).This organization makes the book much more user-friendly for beginners than would a strictly numeric arrangement.Readers who want to look up a particular field can use the index to do so.The book's added features, such as screen shots and tables, quizzes at the end of each chapter, and a robust glossary, help to make MARC21 for Everyone a valuable tool for learning (and teaching) MARC basics.}, number={1}, journal={Library Resources & Technical Services}, publisher={American Library Association}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2007}, month={Jan}, pages={74–74} } @article{orcutt_2007, title={Convergence culture [Review]}, volume={44}, DOI={10.5860/choice.44-5465}, abstractNote={mudanças na mídia (passado, presente e futuro)" Jenkins também sublinha seu compromisso com a ampliação}, number={10}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2007}, pages={1749} } @article{orcutt_2007, title={Digital generations: Children, young people, and the new media [Review]}, volume={44}, DOI={10.5860/choice.44-2535}, number={5}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2007}, pages={825} } @article{orcutt_2007, title={Digital generations: Children, young people, and the new media [Review]}, volume={44}, number={5}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2007}, month={Jan}, pages={825} } @misc{orcutt_2007, title={Encyclopedia of catholic social thought, social science, and social policy [Review]}, volume={132}, number={17}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2007}, pages={88} } @article{orcutt_2007, title={Encyclopedia of catholic social thought, social science, and social policy [Review]}, volume={132}, number={17}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2007}, pages={88} } @article{orcutt_2007, title={Encyclopedia of religion, communication, and media [Review]}, volume={45}, DOI={10.5860/choice.45-0011}, number={1}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2007}, pages={60} } @article{orcutt_2007, title={From A to Zine: Building a winning zine collection in your library [Review]}, volume={51}, number={1}, journal={Library Resources & Technical Services}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2007}, month={Jan}, pages={74} } @misc{orcutt_2007, title={God's problem: How the Bible fails to answer our most important question - Why we suffer [Review]}, volume={132}, number={20}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2007}, pages={124} } @article{orcutt_2007, title={God's problem: How the Bible fails to answer our most important question - Why we suffer [Review]}, volume={132}, number={20}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2007}, pages={124} } @misc{orcutt_2007, title={Jezebel: The untold story of the Bible's harlot queen [Review]}, volume={132}, number={16}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2007}, pages={76} } @article{orcutt_2007, title={Jezebel: The untold story of the Bible's harlot queen [Review]}, volume={132}, number={16}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2007}, pages={76} } @misc{orcutt_2007, title={Reading the old testament with the ancient church: Exploring the formation of early Christian thought [Review]}, volume={132}, number={15}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2007}, pages={65} } @article{orcutt_2007, title={Reading the old testament with the ancient church: Exploring the formation of early Christian thought [Review]}, volume={132}, number={15}, journal={Library Journal}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2007}, pages={65} } @article{orcutt_2006, title={Book Review: Guide to Out-of-Print Materials}, volume={50}, DOI={10.5860/lrts.50n2.147}, number={2}, journal={Library Resources & Technical Services}, publisher={American Library Association}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2006}, month={Apr}, pages={147–148} } @misc{orcutt_2006, title={Dictionary of mass communication & media research [Review]}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2006}, pages={986} } @article{orcutt_2006, title={Dictionary of mass communication & media research [Review]}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2006}, month={Feb}, pages={986} } @article{orcutt_2006, title={Dictionary of the Old Testament: Historical books [Review]}, volume={43}, DOI={10.5860/choice.43-6236}, number={11}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2006}, pages={1965} } @article{orcutt_2006, title={Dictionary of the Old Testament: Historical books [Review]}, volume={43}, number={11}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2006}, month={Jul}, pages={1965} } @article{orcutt_2006, title={Out-of-print and special collections materials and Guide to out-of-print materials [Reviews]}, volume={50}, number={2}, journal={Library Resources & Technical Services}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2006}, month={Apr}, pages={147–148} } @article{orcutt_powell_2006, title={Reflections on the OCLC WorldCat Collection Analysis Tool: We still need the next step}, volume={18}, DOI={10.7771/2380-176x.5010}, number={5}, journal={Against the Grain (Charleston, S.C.)}, author={Orcutt, D. and Powell, T.}, year={2006}, pages={44–48} } @article{orcutt_2005, title={Dialogue on the Internet: Language, civic identity, and computer-mediated communication [Review]}, volume={42}, DOI={10.5860/choice.42-5071}, abstractNote={Introduction: The World in the Post and the Page The Development of Dialogism: An Exploration of Major Influence E-Mail Discussion Messages: A Means for Constructing Civic Identity Websites as Means for Propagating Civic, Political, and Ideological Concepts Conclusion References Cited Index}, number={9}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2005}, pages={1580} } @article{orcutt_2005, title={Dialogue on the Internet: Language, civic identity, and computer-mediated communication [Review]}, volume={42}, number={9}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2005}, month={Jan}, pages={1580} } @article{orcutt_2005, title={Historical dictionary of Jainism [Review]}, volume={42}, DOI={10.5860/choice.42-2549}, abstractNote={1 Editor's Foreword 2 Preface 3 Jain Scriptures 4 Reader's Notes 5 Map of Major Jain Sites in India 6 Chronology 7 Introduction 8 The Dictionary 9 Appendix *The Fourteen Gunasthanas*The Eleven Pratimas*The Jain Festival Calendar*Tirthankaras Cognizances*Tirthankaras' Birth and Nirvana Sites*Tirthankaras' Yaksas and Yaksis 10 Bibliography 11 About the Author}, number={5}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2005}, pages={828} } @article{orcutt_2005, title={Historical dictionary of Jainism [Review]}, volume={42}, number={5}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2005}, month={Jan}, pages={828} } @article{orcutt_2005, title={The title-page: Its early development, 1460-1510 [Review]}, volume={49}, number={1}, journal={Library Resources & Technical Services}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2005}, month={Jan}, pages={67} } @article{orcutt_2005, title={The title-page: Its early development, 1460-1510.}, volume={49}, ISSN={["0024-2527"]}, DOI={10.5860/lrts.49n1.67.2}, number={1}, journal={LIBRARY RESOURCES & TECHNICAL SERVICES}, publisher={American Library Association}, author={Orcutt, D}, year={2005}, month={Jan}, pages={67–67} } @book{orcutt_2004, place={London}, title={Bibliographer for Annual Bibliography of English Language and Literature}, volume={79-86}, publisher={Modern Humanities Research Association}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2004} } @article{orcutt_2004, title={Center for Communication [Review]}, volume={41}, DOI={10.5860/choice.41-2624}, number={5}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2004}, pages={900} } @article{orcutt_2004, title={Critical thinking and learning: An encyclopedia for parents and teachers [Review]}, volume={42}, DOI={10.5860/choice.42-0692}, abstractNote={Preface List of Contributors Into the Great Wide Open: Introducing Critical Thinking Art Assumptions Bilingual Education Bloom's Taxonomy Childhood and Adolescence Cultural Studies Curriculum Democracy Diversity Educational Psychology Educational Relevance Empowerment Epistemology Feminism Hermeneutics Identity Ideology Journal Writing Justice Language Arts Literacy Mass Media Mathematics Organizational Change Philosophy Queer Studies Race and Racism Scholar Practitioners Science Sexism Social Studies Standards Teaching and Learning Terrorism Textbooks Theory Thinking Skills Values Work Xenophobia Bibliography Index}, number={2}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2004}, pages={273–274} } @article{orcutt_2004, title={Critical thinking and learning: An encyclopedia for parents and teachers [Review]}, volume={42}, number={2}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2004}, month={Oct}, pages={273–274} } @article{orcutt_2004, title={Dictionary of media and communication studies [Review]}, volume={42}, DOI={10.5860/choice.42-0677}, abstractNote={The Watson and Hill dictionary in its 8th edition presents a fresh and comprehensive overview serving all aspect of the study of media and communication. It provides a detailed compendium of the different facets of personal, group, mass media and Internet communication and continues to be a vital source of information for all those interested in how communication affects our lives. The Dictionary of Media and Communication Studies has provided students and the general public alike with a gateway into the study of intercultural communication, public relations and marketing communications since 1984. New entries in this edition explore the profound shifts that have taken place in the world of communication in recent years. The impact of the new online leviathans such as Amazon, Facebook, Google, Twitter and YouTube is measured against the traditional dominance, globally, of the mass media. Other themes include the interesting changes affecting public service broadcasting, the role of advertising and PR, the nature and extent of regulation, the impact of globalisation and the consumerisation of knowledge and culture. This volume seeks to make its twenty-first century readers more media literate, as well as more critical consumers of modern news.}, number={2}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2004}, pages={270} } @article{orcutt_2004, title={Dictionary of media and communication studies [Review]}, volume={42}, number={2}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2004}, month={Oct}, pages={270} } @article{orcutt_2004, title={Ecole Initiative (internet resource) [Review]}, volume={42}, DOI={10.5860/choice.42-0242}, number={1}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2004}, pages={119} } @article{orcutt_2004, title={Ecole Initiative (internet resource) [Review]}, volume={42}, number={1}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2004}, month={Sep}, pages={119} } @article{orcutt_2004, title={Encyclopedia of religion and war [Review]}, volume={41}, DOI={10.5860/choice.41-5041}, abstractNote={Afghanistan Africa, Nigeria Africa, Sudan Africa, West African Church African Religion - Independent African African Religion - Warrior Cult African Religion - Yoruba African Religion - Zulu Anglicanism Anabaptist Pacifism Apartheid Assassins Aum Shinrikyo Babi and Baha'i Religions Bishop's Wars (England 1639, 1640) Boer War Buddhism - China Buddhism - India Buddhism - Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam Buddhism - Mahayana Buddhism - Myanmar (Burma) and Vietnam Buddhism - Taiwan Buddhism - Theravada Buddhism - Tibet Byzantine-Muslim War of 645 Central and South America - Aztec Central and South America - General Central and South America - Inca Central and South America - Maya Christian Identity Christianity - African-American Traditions Christianity and Revolution Christianity, Early - Constantinian Movement Christianity, Early - Jesus Movement Confucianism - Classical Confucianism - Han Dynasty Confucianism - Ming and Qing Dynasties Confucianism - Modern Confucianism - Neo-Confucianism Crusades Deobandism Eastern Orthodoxy, Pacifism in England English Civil Wars European Wars of Religion Fundamentalism in Egypt and Sudan Fundamentalism in Iran Genocide in Africa Genocide in Bosnia Genocide in Europe Greek Religions Hamas Hellenistic Religions Hinduism - Classical Hinduism - Early Medieval Period Hinduism - Medieval Period Hinduism - Modern Hinduism - Vedic Period Hindu-Muslim Violence in India Hizbullah Holy Roman Empire-Papacy Wars Holy War Idea in the Biblical Tradition Indo-European Mythology Indonesia Iranian Revolution of 1979 Islam - Age of Conquest Islam - Qur'anic Islam - Shi'a Islam - Sufism Islam - Sunni Islamic Law of War Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan Jain Japan - Tokugawa Period Jewish Revolt of 66-73 Jihad Judaism - Biblical Period Judaism - Conservative Judaism - Medieval Period Judaism - Orthodox Judaism - Rabbinic Period Judaism - Reconstructionist Judaism - Reform Judaism, Pacifism in Kashmir Ku Klux Klan Latin America Liberation Theology Lutheran Germany Lutheranism Manichaeism Martyrdom Mennonites Methodism Millenarian Violence - General Millenarian Violence - Latin America Millenarian Violence - Thai Buddhism Millennialism Mormons Morocco Movement Muslim Brotherhood Muslim Civil Wars Native American - Iroquois Native American - Pueblo Revolt Native American - Sioux Nazism and Holocaust North Africa Northern Ireland Palestine 1948 Palestine and Israel Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) Quakers Reformed Christianity Religion, Violence, and Genocide Religious Feminism and War Religious wars in Ethiopia 1529-1543 Roman Catholicism - Just War Doctrine Roman Catholicism - Theology and Colonization Roman Catholicism, Pacifism in Roman Religions Shi'ite Rebellion of 815-819 Shinto - Ancient Shinto - Modern Sikhism - Contemporary Sikhism - General History Sino-Tibetan Wars Spanish Christian-Muslim Wars}, number={9}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2004}, pages={1644} } @article{orcutt_2004, title={Encyclopedia of religion and war [Review]}, volume={41}, number={9}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2004}, month={May}, pages={1644} } @article{orcutt_2004, title={English literature and religion [Review]}, volume={41}, DOI={10.5860/choice.41-3361}, number={6}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2004}, pages={1093} } @article{orcutt_2004, title={Practical media dictionary [Review]}, volume={42}, DOI={10.5860/choice.42-0677a}, abstractNote={Whether you are creating a poster with a desktop publishing package, making an animated film, working with computer-generated graphics or producing a sophisticated drama on digital video, virtually all media and multimedia courses will have elements of practical work. The difficulty for students and new entrants to the industry is that the day-to-day working language, the customised roles and the specific deployment of skills and specialist activities can seem at first daunting and impenetrable. "The Practical Media Dictionary" is an essential guide to understanding how the media works and how people in the media talk to each other about their industry. It makes the media accessible. It untangles the jargon, and provides you with the knowledge to participate in the production of practical media products. The definitions are clear, uncomplicated and easy to understand relying on very little previous media knowledge. Technical terms are fully explained in everyday language. It includes specialist jargon found in a TV studio, and on location. It includes features such as: The vocabulary of radio production; terms used in multimedia; specialist language of film production; comprehensive job and skills definitions; and frequently accessed organisations associated with practical media production. If you are studying or starting work in the media, this dictionary is an essential companion and a comprehensive guide to successful and practical media production.}, number={2}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, Darby}, year={2004}, pages={270} } @article{orcutt_2004, title={Practical media dictionary [Review]}, volume={42}, number={2}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2004}, month={Oct}, pages={270} } @article{orcutt_2004, title={Religion and American cultures: An encyclopedia of traditions, diversity, and popular expressions [Review]}, volume={41}, DOI={10.5860/choice.41-3152}, number={6}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2004}, pages={1053} } @article{orcutt_2003, title={Bible wisdom [Review]}, volume={41}, DOI={10.5860/choice.41-0651}, number={2}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2003}, pages={308} } @article{orcutt_2003, title={Bibliographies for Biblical research: Supplemental series [Review]}, volume={40}, DOI={10.5860/choice.40-3137}, number={6}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2003}, pages={960} } @article{orcutt_2003, title={Continuum encyclopedia of modern criticism and theory [Review]}, volume={40}, number={4}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2003}, pages={607} } @article{orcutt_2003, title={Encyclopedia of international media and communications [Review]}, volume={41}, DOI={10.5860/choice.41-1274}, abstractNote={Everyone agrees that we're living in the Information Age. How have we shaped the Information Age, and how has it shaped us? "The Encyclopedia of International Media and Communications" exhaustively explores the ways that editorial content - from journalism and scholarship to films and infomercials - is developed, presented, stored, analyzed, and regulated around the world. For readers and researchers of all levels, the Encyclopedia provides perspective and context about content, delivery systems, and their myriad relationships, as well as clearly drawn avenues for further research. Articles begin with easily understandable concepts and become increasingly sophisticated, satisfying the needs of all readers. It features articles by leading authors from major institutions, organizations, and corporations around the world. It contains approximately 220 separate articles, all original contributions commissioned for this work. Extensive cross-referencing system links related articles; "further reading" lists appear at the end of each entry.}, number={3}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2003}, pages={512} } @article{orcutt_2003, title={Encyclopedia of new media [Review]}, volume={40}, DOI={10.5860/choice.40-4936}, abstractNote={Comprehensive Index List of Entries A Reader's Guide Introduction Encyclopedia of New Media Bibliography Contributors Name Index}, number={9}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2003}, pages={1519} } @article{orcutt_2003, title={Internet theology resources [Review]}, volume={41}, DOI={10.5860/choice.41-0877}, number={2}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2003}, pages={355} } @article{orcutt_2002, title={ComicsResearch.org [Review]}, volume={40}, number={2}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2002}, pages={255} } @article{orcutt_2002, title={Oxford guide to ideas and issues of the Bible [Review]}, volume={39}, DOI={10.5860/choice.39-5531}, number={10}, journal={Choice}, author={Orcutt, D.}, year={2002}, pages={1738–1740} }