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the feminist librarian

the feminist librarian

Category Archives: library life

from the archives: when work and life collide

21 Wednesday Jul 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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family, fun

So the other day at work when I was searching the Library of Congress authority files (where librarians go to verify how to construct subject or name entries while cataloging) I had the idea to look up my grandfather, a published author, in the database. And lo!

There he is, Cook, James I., 1925-. It’s super strange to see someone you actually know listed in the Library of Congress catalog, and have their identity described in an authority record like this.

LC Control Number: n 80104485
HEADING: Cook, James I., 1925-
Biographical/Historical Note: b. Mar. 8; Th.D. from Princeton; prof. of Biblical languages & lit. at Western Theol. Sem.
Found In:Grace upon grace … 1975.

Even though he died May 1st, 2007, the catalog entry doesn’t reflect that because unless there’s an immediate need to change the authority record the LoC usually doesn’t. They just leave it the way it was when they first created the file.

Anyway, that was my little sliver of enjoyment for the day. Library geeks will get some fun out of it, and the rest of you can make of it what you will.

want.

15 Thursday Jul 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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books


Via Lamdba Literary comes this awesome installation at the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) in London. It’s called “The Ark” and is part of the V&A’s 1:1 Architects Build Small Spaces exhibition.

Who doesn’t need a giant walk-inside bookcase? I mean, really!

from the archive: "the librarian’s image"

28 Monday Jun 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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archivists, humor, northeastern, politics

I’m processing a collection at Northeastern donated by Michael Meltsner, one of the faculty at the School of Law. On an op-ed page from the New York Times, 13 October 2003, I came across the following letter to the editor.

To the Editor:

Your Oct. 9 Arts pages article about the librarian action figure modeled on Nancy Pearl referred to librarians who found the figure offensive as the ”humorless reaches of librarianship.” A number of my colleagues have taken offense at being described as such. We are opposed to the action figure not because we are ”humorless” but because it perpetuates a stereotype that is demeaning to our profession.

Perhaps public librarians are not directly affected by the dowdy librarian stereotype, but as law librarians we provide library services to some of the most prestigious firms in the country and must maintain a professional image.

The librarian doll with the ”amazing push-button shushing action” damages the professional image that we have worked so hard to achieve.

TANIA DANIELSON

Port Washington, N.Y., Oct. 9, 2003

I think it’s the second to last paragraph that really takes the cake. I’m fascinated by the way it combines a total lack of willingness to enjoy the light-hearted, self-depricating humor embodied by the action figure — not to mention the way the action figure is an ironic commentary on the stereotype she’s unhappy with — and professional snobbery at the expense of public librarianship. I mean really: who in their right mind disses public librarians? I guess now we have our answer!

Given that this was a random letter to the New York Times from seven years ago, I’m not really out to slam Ms. Danielson for what I sincerely hope are now outdated sentiments! But I was really impressed by the elitism this letter was saturated with, and I’m amusing myself on this stifling hot Monday in June by re-posting it here.

"bibliobimbo": pro-book pulp fiction posters

22 Tuesday Jun 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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books, fun

Thanks to Anne Bentley, our art curator at the Massachusetts Historical Society for this link. Helfond Book Gallery, Ltd. offers a series of images from the underbelly of the rare book world, otherwise known as “bibliopulp” posters riffing on pulp fiction book covers from the mid-twentieth century. I’m personally torn between the “Bibliobimbo” (pictured above), “Rare Book Tramp” and — with a cover that would make Jack Harkness proud — “They Made Me a Book Collector.”

Happy Wednesday!

to be or not to be a "professional" (and does it matter?)

03 Monday May 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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education, librarians

Blogger and librarian Ryan Deschamps @ The Other Librarian posted a thought-provoking piece last week, Ten Reasons Why ‘Professional Librarian’ is an Oxymoron. He introduces the list by writing

Before you comment, yes, this is an unbalanced look at professionalism. Yes, I am trolling a little bit – but with a heart that wants to lead discussion on the topic of library professionalism. Please do write a post about why these ten reason are bullocks.

On the other hand, I often see librarians and library school students that take professionalism as a given. I see this as unrealistic, especially in an era of rapid change . . . If librarians cannot personally address the following anti-professional assumptions as individuals, they cannot call themselves professional. What I am saying is that the MLIS or whatever equivalent a librarian has on their wall cannot count towards any status in society.

You can read the rest of the post at The Other Librarian.

I’ll be upfront about the fact that, while I am proud to call myself a librarian and to the work that I do in libraries and archive (and enrolled in my Master’s degree program in order to pursue work in this field that I love) I am not so hot about the idea of holding “status in society” as a “professional.” In fact, the idea that my MLS degree (when I complete my course this December) will signify some particular status in the world — one that sets me apart from my colleagues who do the same work but do not hold a library science degree — does not sit comfortably with me at all.

It wasn’t something that I thought about before starting graduate school: the fact that graduate school is, in large measure, about socializing workers into a particular professional identity. And to be quite honest, when it dawned upon me in the first few months of library school that this was part of the agenda, I kinda freaked out. The amount of angst among my fellow students and the faculty over defining and defending professional status makes me feel kinda claustrophobic. I hate drawing boundaries, boxing people in. Forget claiming “librarian” as a professional identity — try making the case for “archivist,” “records manager,” and other sub-fields being professional identities in their own right, distinct from the already-on-the-defensive identity of “librarian.” Sometimes I feel like folks spend more time worrying about their percieved status in society than they do just, you know, doing the job they feel called to do.

Being an historian, it’s really hard not to look at every identity or state of being in the world as contingent on specific historical forces having created it as such, for specific historically-relevant reasons that may or may not continue to have relevancy today. Take, for example, the concept of professionalism, and of workers belonging to particular professions for which they have recieved (in order to be deemed “professional”) advanced training, usually in an institution of higher education.

In our society, today, we consider “professional” jobs to be more credible — and able to command a higher level of income, at least in theory — than non-professional jobs. Believe me, as a pre-professional librarian (assuming librarianship is, indeed, considered a professional occupation) I am acutely aware of this. The thing is, we decided it should be this way. The notion of being a professional equaling status if actually a fairly recent development, starting in the late nineteenth century, back when people who were paid for the work that they did were considered of lesser status than, say, the “men of science,” the gentleman scholars whose accumulated wealth allowed them to pursue activities like history and scientific inquiry without worrying where the next meal was coming from. Slowly, claiming the identity of “professional X” became a way to claim a certain expertise, a certain skillset, that made you a credible source of information: even if you got paid for the work you did every day. (I’m totally over-simplifying, but you get the basic idea).

So (to return to Mr. Deschamps question), is “professional librarian” an oxymoron? His lists of reasons why they we (see? I work as a librarian in two separate libraries and still have to purposefully think in terms of a professional identity) are not certainly has merits. Though the arguments in favor are often equally compelling. My question is, do we really need to worry about fighting to preserve the status of “professional”? What are the benefits (and costs!) of understanding librarianship as a professional endeavor: when we are on the defensive, seeking to draw the boundaries between “librarian” and other identities and activities, what potentially valuable knowledge workers are we leaving out in the cold? What is the value of being exclusionary? If the work we do is valuable, it shouldn’t matter under what title (or identity, professional or non-) we do that work.

My thoughts on this are still muddled, often contradictory, and in constant flux and I plot my own trajectory moving forward (in work and in life). However, I do think it’s important not merely to examine the evidence for and against librarianship as a professional field, but also to ask why it matters that librarianship is considered a professional identity and whether those reasons (spoken and unspoken) are reasons we feel comfortable standing behind.

Research @ Cornell’s Human Sexuality Collection

10 Wednesday Feb 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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gender and sexuality

The Women’s Collections Roundtable of the Society of American Archivists reports that Cornell University’s Human Sexuality Collection is offering travel funds for researchers wishing to use the collections. Applications are due March 31st and guidelines for applying can be found on the HSC website. According to the collection website,

The Human Sexuality Collection seeks to preserve and make accessible primary sources that document historical shifts in the social construction of sexuality, with a focus on U.S. lesbian and gay history and the politics of pornography.

You can check out the awesome-sounding projects of previous awardees as well.

On a side note, the curator of the collection holds the title of “Curator, Human Sexuality Collection; Library Liaison to the Cornell Feminist, Gender, & Sexuality Studies Program” and someday I totally want her job.

Quick Hit: MHS stats for 2009

31 Thursday Dec 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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MHS

Jeremy reports on the MHS blog that 2009 was an impressive year for the Library Reader Services staff

All told we had over 1,450 researchers visit the library over the course of the year, for a total of 2,851 daily uses. We had over 740 first time visitors this year, a good indication that both our website and our public and educational programs are reaching out to new users. It is also a good indicator that people are still interested in using libraries.

In addition to the people that visited the library in person, our reference staff engaged in over 1,500 email correspondences with researchers seeking assistance, answered 62 posted letters, and fielded over 1,100 reference-related phone calls.

In servicing our researchers the staff made over 13,000 photocopies of MHS documents, and paged over 5,600 call slips. Because researchers can request multiple volumes and/or boxes from manuscript collections on a single call slip, it is difficult to gauge just how many individual items were retrieved and returned to the stacks, but I would wager it is a safe bet to say that it was well over 10,000 items.

If you’re interested in further stats, like where all these researchers came from, click through to the Beehive for his full post.

Wintersession: Digital Memorial and Cultural Archives

08 Tuesday Dec 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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history, librarians, simmons, thesis

On a quick personal and professional note (for all of you who read this blog to find out What Anna Get’s Up To When We Aren’t There To Keep An Eye On Her):

I’m excited to report that I’ve been accepted to participate in a wintersession course (beginning this evening) on Development of Digital Memorial and Cultural Archives, taught by Kevin Glick, Electronic Records Archivist from Yale University. The class is being offered as a joint project between Southern Connecticut State University and the group Voices of September 11, which curates the 9/11 Living Memorial digital archive to commemorate the lives and stories of September 11, 2001 and the February 26, 1993 World Trade Center bombing.

I’m really excited to be taking this class, since I am hoping to create a digital archive for the materials I collect as part of my oral history research. I am also looking forward to broadening my knowledge of New England a bit, since I have never been to Connecticut except passing through on the Amtrak on the way to New York City. Now I have a totally educational (read: legitimate) excuse to make the trip!

Quick Hit: Letters of the Presidents

12 Thursday Nov 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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blogging, history, librarians, MHS

I have a brief post up on the Beehive describing a talk given my friend and colleague Tracy Potter and her intern, Sarah Desmond, at the MHS on their project documenting the letters written by U.S. Presidents in the Society’s collections. For those of you interested in political history, wander on over and check it out.

"Who ARE these people?"

11 Wednesday Nov 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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gender and sexuality, politics

Yesterday, LISNews linked to a post by self-described “conservative librarian” Bert Chapman, who blogs at townhall.com, in which Mr. Chapman made the “economic case against homosexuality.” For those of you who might entertain fleeting hopes that he was taking the New York Times route, and tabulating the cost of homophobic discrimination against gay couples in our society, I am sad to report that this is not the case. No. Instead, Mr. Chapman tries to argue that “our nation cannot afford the extremely high financial costs of this [homosexual] lifestyle.”

I realize that open-mindedness and empathy for one’s fellow human beings are not legally-enforcible prerequisites for the library science profession — but, damn there are days when I sure as hell wish they were.

The people I am glad to call fellow-professionals, however, are the folks who took the time to post comments on the LISNews item. You are all made of awesome (as Hanna would say) and remind me why I think librarians are some of the coolest people around. A sampling of comments thus far:

“oh, yes, the shopping. I had to give up the lifestyle when I couldn’t afford the clothing.”

“‘Lifestyle’ – really? Really? I can’t believe people still use that word in this context.”

“There are a number of lifestyles I object to. The idiot lifestyle, the bigot lifestyle, the uneducated lifestyle, the fearmongering lifestyle, the use-of-the-word-“lifestyle” lifestyle, the describing someone’s existence as a lifestyle, the vile hate disguised as a scholarly opinion lifestyle, the cowardly bully lifestyle and the sub-literate Townhall columnist lifestyle.”

And my personal favorite: “Who ARE these pathetic bigots and how in Hell did they land in my profession? Get OUT…”

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"the past is a wild party; check your preconceptions at the door." ~ Emma Donoghue

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