Regular

In ‘Who Signs the Paychecks’, I wrote: Hiding the fact of an unequal employer – worker relationship behind an illusion of equality is dangerous at the best of times, but especially so in a period of collective bargaining. And only a couple of months later we have the example of...

In organizing my files this weekend, I came across a paper I wrote in library school under the influence of exposure to the history of reading. For some reason, the act of reading struck me while rereading Greene’s Heart of the Matter, and I wanted to explore some of the...

(part two) Blog posts are, by definition, “hot takes”. But even as I finished part one I realized that I had not treated Libraries as Dual Power with anything like the depth it required. In this part, I want to dig a little deeper into some of the assumptions of...

(part one) When I was in library school, our collection development class rehashed the Berninghausen Debate (probably for the millionth time - sorry, Dr Howard). Essentially, the debate boils down to the social role of libraries, often framed as a debate over the “neutrality” of libraries. In terms of collection...

I’ve been thinking quite a lot lately about the presumed values of our presumed profession. “Presumed” in this case both in the sense that we presume we agree on meanings (of the words we use to describe our values, for example) and in the sense that a profession of librarianship...