Saturday, November 24, 2007
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
The Passive Librarian
This just in: "Most people who work in libraries are passive by nature... [s]o it's difficult for them, at times, to say no or to eject people from the library. That goes against the grain of their nature." (Link).
Holy stereotype, BatGirl. It's been my experience that library folk aren't particularly passive. It's true that we're in the business of customer service, so we try to help people. It's also true that many of us are public servants, and the "servant" part of this phrase means that we have have a duty to accommodate, but this accommodation only goes so far. I think we deal with conflict very well, thank you, perhaps better than your average Joe off the street. I would venture to say that communication is a large part of our job, here in the library, and many of us can use our communication skills to build understanding and diffuse problems. When all else fails, though, we ask problem people to leave, and when that fails, we call the police.
In any case, the guy who I quoted above, Warren Graham, is apparently another librarian with a black belt: he's got a website with some wonderful pictures of black belt librarians. I totally love this one:
Mmmmmm. I wonder if I could get my picture on his site...
Holy stereotype, BatGirl. It's been my experience that library folk aren't particularly passive. It's true that we're in the business of customer service, so we try to help people. It's also true that many of us are public servants, and the "servant" part of this phrase means that we have have a duty to accommodate, but this accommodation only goes so far. I think we deal with conflict very well, thank you, perhaps better than your average Joe off the street. I would venture to say that communication is a large part of our job, here in the library, and many of us can use our communication skills to build understanding and diffuse problems. When all else fails, though, we ask problem people to leave, and when that fails, we call the police.
In any case, the guy who I quoted above, Warren Graham, is apparently another librarian with a black belt: he's got a website with some wonderful pictures of black belt librarians. I totally love this one:

Labels: Black Belts, Librarians
Monday, November 19, 2007
Golden Compass
The headline reads: 'Golden Compass' draws ire of the Catholic League: Watchdog group says film pushes an atheist agenda.
I haven't yet read the His Dark Materials trilogy, but I'm damn well going to now that I've been told it's baaaaad. I checked the number of requests on this title, and they've sky-rocketed recently, so I'm not the only one. This bodes well for film at the box-office.
Better yet, I hear from one of my colleagues that there's an inflammatory email making the rounds (see here), and we can expect complaints.
I quite hope the film is just as atheistic in its world-view as its detractors would like us to believe. Hooray for a multiplicity of opinions expressed in books and film, I say. If we can have The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe with its Christian underpinnings, why can't we have The Golden Compass with atheistic underpinnings.
I haven't yet read the His Dark Materials trilogy, but I'm damn well going to now that I've been told it's baaaaad. I checked the number of requests on this title, and they've sky-rocketed recently, so I'm not the only one. This bodes well for film at the box-office.
Better yet, I hear from one of my colleagues that there's an inflammatory email making the rounds (see here), and we can expect complaints.
I quite hope the film is just as atheistic in its world-view as its detractors would like us to believe. Hooray for a multiplicity of opinions expressed in books and film, I say. If we can have The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe with its Christian underpinnings, why can't we have The Golden Compass with atheistic underpinnings.