Wednesday, August 08, 2007

451 Degrees Flatscreened

I'm reading again. The paper variety. Books. This is good. I'm starting with Fahrenheit 451, a book I never read, though have heard about many times. It's the book chosen by Attleboro for One Town One Book. And I can see why. But also, it's really surreal to read old science fiction, because those authors DID get some of the things right. Like little earbuds of sound to help us sleep. Televisions to "entertain us but and omit thought. In some ways I think we're close to all of this.

Bradbury writes,
"Give the people contests they win by remembering the words to more popular songs or the names of state capitals or how much corn Iowa grew last year. Cram them full of noncombustible data, chock them so damned full of 'facts' they feel stuffed, but absolutely 'brilliant' with information. They they'll feel they're thinking, they'll get a sense of motion without moving."
p. 54 Great Books of the 20th C edition. Sounds like reality TV, sounds like Singing Bee on NBC, sounds like the News. Sounds like Google. Years later, it seems this is still the crux for Bradbury, as he explains here.

Isn't this what some say about the Internet? The Information age? Even the rise of search engines and OPACs, all this computer data spitting out the answers without enough time for people to think about what's in front of them, or what they really want.

To our credit of course, we're not burning the books. And there are many, I think who believe that going paperless does not have to equate with becoming mindless drones. I suppose there will be always be something about the feel of a book in the hand. (A book in the hand is worth two on the screen? I don't know...) The way some fall asleep with it still in their hand or covering over their face.

In a sense, librarians are information gatekeepers. I don't want to forget that information isn't the same as knowledge. Vibration isn't the same as action. We are moving, but we can't forget to bring our books, our opinions, our challenges, our minds.

Saturday, August 04, 2007

Only 7 weeks later

And I finally figure out how to make it possible to post from my gmail account! Duh! There was a lot of confusion for me about this during the class, but now I think I'm more sorted out. Thank you very much.



Speaking of sorted, here's the long awaited picture of the newly shifted library space. Actually I'm posting a few. And more are available via Flickr (which is where these are from).

The light purplish carpet patch under the tables is where the 5th stack of shelving used to be. Now only a quarter is being used, and it's in the back left corner of the center pic. All the computer monitors have another home, and will be moved before the beginning of the school year. This isn't a gigantic change for the space, but I am hoping it will make a difference. And did I mention there will now be sunlight? Ahhh...