From Piers Denton's essay "I Was A Teenage Anarcho-Terrorist."
- "Whilst libraries remain free at the point of access, they will be part of the arsenal of liberation, and it remains my pleasure to be at my reference desk handing out books" (71).
Reading that reminded me of that old propaganda poster. It does seem appropriate. Anyhow, Denton also wrote:
- "From urban guerrilla [referring to his experience] to public librarian may seem a large leap, but if knowledge is power and access to that power brings freedom, then libraries too are revolutionary, and librarians can be counted amongst the workers political vanguard" (71).
Chris Dodge's essay on alternative publications, "Libraries to the People, Redux," is worth reading too, especially for people "not in the know." How can you not be "in the know" if you are a librarian is beyond me, but I will let that slide. Dodge refers to Sandy Berman, the legendary cataloguer, and to Berman's famous line, "I can't have information I know would be of interest to someone and not share it" (qtd. in 130). The part defining revolting librarians and the one responding to "what makes librarianship exciting to you?" are also worth a look. In fact, I photocopied the essay, and I may someday reply to the question myself, so stay tuned.
2 comments:
That graphic reminds me of Woody Guthrie's famous slogan on his guitar:
This Machine Kills Fascists
I like that, can we paraphrase it slightly to make it the motto of libraries? Best, and keep on blogging.
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