Korean decimal classification explained

The Korean Decimal Classification (KDC) is a system of library classification used in South Korea.

The structure and main level classes of the KDC are based on the Dewey Decimal Classification.

The KDC is maintained and published by the Classification Committee of the Korean Library Association.

The first edition of the classification was published in 1964; the most recent edition is the sixth edition published in 2013. Almost all school and public libraries in South Korea use the KDC to organize their collections, as well as the National Library of Korea and some university libraries.

History

Multiple library classification systems had been developed for Korean libraries before the publication of the KDC.

These included the Railway Bureau Library Classification(1920), the Korean Decimal Classification edited by Bong-Suk Park(known as KDCP, 1947), the Han-Un Decimal Classification(1954), and the Kuk-Yeon Decimal Classification(1958).

After the disappearance of editor Bong-Suk Park in the 1950s, the KDCP system decreased in use.[1] Korean librarians considered adopting the Dewey Decimal Classification (DDC), especially after it was implemented at Yonsei University in 1957, but struggled to apply it to East Asian and Korean-focused works in their collections.

In February 1963, members of the Korean Library Association's Classification were appointed to create a national classification; they decided to make revisions to the order of the main classes of the DDC, for example bringing together the class Language(700) together with the class for Literature(800).

Committee members prepared draft classes and indexes and the first edition of the KDC was published in May 1964. Both the text and the index were written in Korean Hangul characters and Chinese characters.

The second edition was published just two years later, in 1966, correcting errors and omissions found in the first edition.

The third edition was published in 1980, maintaining the basic framework of the previous editions while expanding significantly.

The fourth edition, published in 1996, made considerable changes, including increasing the number of representatives on the Classification Committee. The committee sought feedback from the library community and implemented revisions included in the recently published edition 20 of the DDC and edition 9 of the Nippon Decimal Classification. New policies applied to the fourth edition included principles suggesting the main classes should remain as static as possible, with focus shown to expanding classes devoted to technology and science. Likewise, many subject specialists were consulted for the publication of the fifth edition in 2009. The publication of the 23rd edition of the DDC in 2011 provided opportunity for a new revision of the KDC, and the sixth edition was published in July 2013. Greater numbers of classes provided number building capacity in the sixth edition, allowing for more specificity.

Edition Publication year Number of volumes Configure Number of pages Editor
1st 1964 1 schedule (Including relative index) 642 Hye-Bong Chun
2nd 1966 1 schedule (Including relative index) 686 Hye-Bong Chun
3rd 1980 2 schedule, relative index 1,027 Byung-Su Lee
4th 1996 2 schedule, relative index 1,516 Ki-Won Kwon
5th 2009 2 schedule, relative index 1,529 Tae-Woo Nam
6th 2013 3 schedule, relative index, manual 1,719 Dong-Geun Oh

Description

The KDC classifies resources primarily by discipline, though some classes are collocated by subject. There are eight auxiliary mnemonic tables used to expand class numbers.

The main classes of the KDC are the same as the main classes of the Dewey Decimal Classification, but four of those main classes are in a different order: Natural sciences (400), Technology and engineering (500), Arts (600), and Language 700. Though the structure is heavily influenced by the DDC, aspects of multiple library classifications have been invoked in the creation of the KDC, including the Library of Congress Classification for the arrangement of the social sciences (300), the Universal Decimal Classification for medical sciences (510), the KDCP for Korean and Oriental subjects, the Nippon Decimal Classification for those of Japan and Oriental subjects.

Classes of the KDC 6th edition

Expansion tables

Usage

KDC is used by a wide range of libraries within Korea, including by the National Library of Korea and most school and public libraries in the country, along with some university libraries, such as the one at Keimyung University.

Notes and References

  1. Oh . Dong-Geun . Developing and Maintaining a National Classification System, Experience from Korean Decimal Classification . Knowledge Organization . 2012 . 39 . 2 . 72–82 . 10.5771/0943-7444-2012-2-72 . October 10, 2021.