I blog...because the news is interesting.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Why I Want to Be a Librarian

The New York Times has an article titled "A Hipper Crowd of Shushers" (see title link) that discusses the new librarian.

Personally, the coolest people I know are librarians, so as far as I am concerned the NYT is late.

The article mentions:

Librarians? Aren’t they supposed to be bespectacled women with a love of classic books and a perpetual annoyance with talkative patrons — the ultimate humorless shushers?

Not any more. With so much of the job involving technology and with a focus now on finding and sharing information beyond just what is available in books, a new type of librarian is emerging — the kind that, according to the Web site Librarian Avengers, is “looking to put the ‘hep cat’ in cataloguing.”

When the cult film “Party Girl” appeared in 1995, with Parker Posey as a night life impresario who finds happiness in the stacks, the idea that a librarian could be cool was a joke.

Now, there is a public librarian who writes dispatches for McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, a favored magazine of the young literati. “Unshelved,” a comic about librarians — yes, there is a comic about librarians — features a hipster librarian character. And, in real life, there are an increasing number of librarians who are notable not just for their pink-streaked hair but also for their passion for pop culture, activism and technology.

...


How did such a nerdy profession become cool — aside from the fact that a certain amount of nerdiness is now cool? Many young librarians and library professors said that the work is no longer just about books but also about organizing and connecting people with information, including music and movies.

And though many librarians say that they, like nurses or priests, are called to the profession, they also say the job is stable, intellectually stimulating and can have reasonable hours — perfect for creative types who want to pursue their passions outside of work and don’t want to finance their pursuits by waiting tables. (The median salary for librarians was about $51,000 in 2006, according to the American Library Association-Allied Professional Organization.)

“I wanted to do something different, something maybe more meaningful,” said Carrie Klein, 36, who used to be a publicist for a record label and for bands such as Radiohead and the Foo Fighters, but is now starting a new job in the library at Entertainment Weekly.

Michelle Campbell, 26, a librarian in Washington, said that librarianship is a haven for left-wing social engagement, which is particularly appealing to the young librarians she knows. “Especially those of us who graduated around the same time as the Patriot Act,” Ms. Campbell said. “We see what happens when information is restricted.”

Ms. Campbell added that she became a librarian because it “combined a geeky intellectualism” with information technology skills and social activism.


One of the things the article neglected to mention was all the cool OLD librarians there are. Outside of the library, I thought seniors were too busy drooling into their oatmeal to do anything.

I get to the library and seniors are rolling to "hotlanta," discussing the new Kama Sutra spin offs, hangliding, and deciding between Bali and Indonesia as vacation spots.

Since I want to be a cool old person, I have to stay in the library system.

What can I say? It's my destiny.

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1 Comments:

Blogger Lucy Dee said...

Understandable. Librarian's do have that cool mystique about them. But I'm still disappointed with the NY public library system. It's not that comprehensive and not user-friendly. The technology is whack, and the system out of date. Now, I may be spoiled from my Ivy League University library system (I used to have a part time job on campus in the library. I knew it inside out.) But the NYPL is mediocre at best. Perhaps, we can ask the cool librarians to hype it up a bit.

4:52 PM

 

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