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<h1 id="tasks-of-the-contingent-librarian">TASKS OF THE CONTINGENT LIBRARIAN</h1>
N.B.: The thesis takes the format of a Rolodex, or Library Index. With an initial focus on the actions carried out by the contingent librarian, I aim to write my thesis beginning with short descriptions that will be collated into a thesis publication. This will serve as a glossary to refer back to, as well as an expandable form, as the Index is an open (unbound) publication that can be appended, condensed, reduced, and shuffled as needed. In doing so I aim to develop a '''lexicon''' that can be useful for the contingencies of libraries (in an expanded sense of the words "library", and "text" that can include shared collections text-based media) to develop, survive, and thrive.
<h2 id="acquiring-texts">1. ACQUIRING TEXTS</h2>
 
<ul>
= TASKS OF THE CONTINGENT LIBRARIAN =
<li>why do we need texts? what is their function?</li>
 
<li>technology of language and its evolution through orality &gt; literacy</li>
== 1. ACQUIRING TEXTS ==
<li>preservation of memory - language inscribed in code</li>
 
<li>social - the recollection of this memory forms narratives that constitutes subjectivity</li>
* why do we need texts? what is their function?
<li>ways of reading: browsing vs searching, skimming vs scanning</li>
** the technology of language and its evolution through orality &gt; literacy
<li>access to texts (or lack thereof) - where do they come from?</li>
** preservation of memory - language inscribed in oral traditions, and in writing
<li>copyright law and authorship - Eva Weinmayr’s <a href="https://books.openedition.org/obp/8338" title="Confronting Authorship, Constructing Practices (How Copyright is Destroying Collective Practice)">essay</a></li>
** social - the recollection of this memory forms narratives that constitutes subjects
<li>technical methods of digitising printed texts</li>
* ways of reading: '''browsing/searching''', '''skimming/scanning'''
<li>scanning, processing text</li>
* access to texts (or lack thereof) - where do they come from?
<li>personal experience of using libraries?</li>
* copyright law and authorship - Eva Weinmayr’s [https://books.openedition.org/obp/8338 essay]
</ul>
* technical methods of '''digitising''' printed texts
<h2 id="classifying-and-cataloguing-them">2. CLASSIFYING AND CATALOGUING THEM</h2>
** scanning, '''processing''' text, '''redesigning''', '''reprinting''', make-do workflows
<ul>
 
<li>aspects of classification</li>
== 2. CLASSIFYING AND CATALOGUING THEM ==
<li>social, linguistic, semiotic, political</li>
 
<li>collections of texts</li>
* '''including/excluding'''
<li>professional, amateur, critical librarianship practices and how they relate to these aspects</li>
* aspects of classification
<li>what connects the books and the readers</li>
** social, linguistic, semiotic, political
<li>how does locality relate to the collection?</li>
** collections of texts
<li>proximity</li>
*** '''professional/amateur'''; critical librarianship practices and how they relate to these aspects
<li>in the infrastructure of the library (the catalogue, the shelves, the folders, the interface)</li>
* what connects the books and the readers
</ul>
* how does locality relate to the collection?
<h2 id="making-texts-accessible">3. MAKING TEXTS ACCESSIBLE</h2>
* proximity
<ul>
** in the infrastructure of the library (the catalogue, the shelves, the folders, the interface)
<li>conversion between formats for diverse reading needs</li>
 
<li>knowledge distribution methods and networks (distinction between digital and analog methods is blurry as they are often combined)</li>
== 3. MAKING TEXTS ACCESSIBLE ==
<li>social</li>
 
<li>distribution of objects arranged through a <a href="https://displaydistribute.com/" title="Display Distribute">social network:</a></li>
* conversion between formats for diverse reading needs (academic/technical/social etc)
<li>governmental</li>
** '''reading/writing''' ('''machine/human''')
<li>copyright law and its restrictions on distribution of knowledge</li>
* '''distributing''' texts through various methods and networks (distinction between digital and analog methods is blurry as they are often combined)
<li>municipal jurisdiction</li>
** social
<li>public libraries, social initatives (e.g. Leeszaal)</li>
*** distribution of objects arranged through a [https://displaydistribute.com/ social network:]
<li>pirate libraries</li>
** governmental
<li>bootlegging, samizdat, warez, zine culture, unofficial/uncatalogued publications</li>
*** copyright law and its restrictions on distribution of knowledge
<li>locality</li>
** municipal
<li>making it public vs making it private - the survival of the library</li>
*** public libraries, social initatives (e.g. Leeszaal)
<li>pirate vs commercial models - what’s at stake?</li>
** pirate
</ul>
*** bootlegging, samizdat, warez, zine culture, unofficial/uncatalogued publications
<h2 id="creating-a-symbolic-link-between-texts-and-readers">4. CREATING A SYMBOLIC LINK BETWEEN TEXTS AND READERS</h2>
* the importance of locality (in both physical and virtual domains) and its relation to a library's survival
<ul>
** '''making it public/keeping it private'''
<li>Why?</li>
* '''pirate/commercial''' models - what’s at stake?
<li>the sociability of libraries</li>
 
<li>bootlegging and unofficial publishing practices</li>
== 4. CREATING A SYMBOLIC LINK BETWEEN TEXTS AND READERS ==
<li>the symbolic (Lacan’s example of a door and its uses outside of binary open/closed)</li>
 
</ul>
* a definition of the symbolic (Lacan’s example of a door and its uses outside of binary '''open/closed''')
** what are the conditions for this symbolic link to resonate and persevere?
* what strategies can be adopted to initiate and maintain this?
** associating texts with the people who read, annotate, and discuss them
*** '''orating/printing''' written & oral discourse around texts - how can these be published?
** shifting power relations from top-down to bottom-up models of library infrastructure
** supporting the sociability of libraries through
*** collectively organised cataloguing and classifying systems
*** bootlegging and "unofficial" publishing practices
*** localised distribution methods
 
=== Bibliography ===
 
Austin, J.L., Urmson, J.O., 1971. ''How to do things with words: the William James lectures delivered at Harvard University in 1955'', Oxford paperbacks. Oxford Univ. Press, London.
 
Bangma, A. and Piet Zwart Instituut (eds.) (2009) ''Resonant bodies, voices, memories''. Berlin: Revolver Publ.
 
Burroughs, W.S., 1970. ''The Electronic Revolution''. Expanded Media Editions, Gottingen.
 
Butler, J., 2014. ''Gender trouble: feminism and the subversion of identity : Tenth Anniversary Edition''. Routledge, London ; New York.
 
Carrion, U., 1980. ''Second Thoughts''. VOID Distributors, Amsterdam.
https://monoskop.org/log/?p=14521
 
Connor, S., 2000. ''Dumbstruck: a cultural history of ventriloquism''. Oxford University Press, Oxford ; New York.
 
Cramer, F., 'Language' in Fuller, M. (Ed.), 2008. ''Software studies: a lexicon'', Leonardo books. MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.
 
Dolar, M., 2006. ''A voice and nothing more'', Short circuits. MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.
 
Flusser, V. and Ströhl, A. (2002) ''Writings''. Electronic mediations v. 6. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
 
Gitelman, L., 1999. ''Scripts, grooves, and writing machines: representing technology in the Edison era''. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif.
 
Hall, S., 'Encoding, Decoding' in During, S. (Ed.), 1999. ''The cultural studies reader, 2nd ed''. ed. Routledge, London ; New York.
 
Hayles, N.K., 2005. ''My mother was a computer: digital subjects and literary texts''. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago ; London.
 
Ong, W.J., Hartley, J., 2012. ''Orality and literacy: the technologizing of the word, 30th anniversary ed.''; 3rd ed. Routledge, London ; New York.
 
Pennycook, A., 2008. 'English As A Language Always In Translation' in ''European Journal of English Studies''. 12. 33-47. 10.1080/13825570801900521.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/233322759_English_As_A_Language_Always_In_Translation
 
Zuckerman, E., 2013. ''Digital cosmopolitans: why we think the internet connects us, why it doesn’t, and how to rewire it''. W.W. Norton & Company, New York.

Latest revision as of 15:24, 14 November 2019

N.B.: The thesis takes the format of a Rolodex, or Library Index. With an initial focus on the actions carried out by the contingent librarian, I aim to write my thesis beginning with short descriptions that will be collated into a thesis publication. This will serve as a glossary to refer back to, as well as an expandable form, as the Index is an open (unbound) publication that can be appended, condensed, reduced, and shuffled as needed. In doing so I aim to develop a lexicon that can be useful for the contingencies of libraries (in an expanded sense of the words "library", and "text" that can include shared collections text-based media) to develop, survive, and thrive.

TASKS OF THE CONTINGENT LIBRARIAN

1. ACQUIRING TEXTS

  • why do we need texts? what is their function?
    • the technology of language and its evolution through orality > literacy
    • preservation of memory - language inscribed in oral traditions, and in writing
    • social - the recollection of this memory forms narratives that constitutes subjects
  • ways of reading: browsing/searching, skimming/scanning
  • access to texts (or lack thereof) - where do they come from?
  • copyright law and authorship - Eva Weinmayr’s essay
  • technical methods of digitising printed texts
    • scanning, processing text, redesigning, reprinting, make-do workflows

2. CLASSIFYING AND CATALOGUING THEM

  • including/excluding
  • aspects of classification
    • social, linguistic, semiotic, political
    • collections of texts
      • professional/amateur; critical librarianship practices and how they relate to these aspects
  • what connects the books and the readers
  • how does locality relate to the collection?
  • proximity
    • in the infrastructure of the library (the catalogue, the shelves, the folders, the interface)

3. MAKING TEXTS ACCESSIBLE

  • conversion between formats for diverse reading needs (academic/technical/social etc)
    • reading/writing (machine/human)
  • distributing texts through various methods and networks (distinction between digital and analog methods is blurry as they are often combined)
    • social
    • governmental
      • copyright law and its restrictions on distribution of knowledge
    • municipal
      • public libraries, social initatives (e.g. Leeszaal)
    • pirate
      • bootlegging, samizdat, warez, zine culture, unofficial/uncatalogued publications
  • the importance of locality (in both physical and virtual domains) and its relation to a library's survival
    • making it public/keeping it private
  • pirate/commercial models - what’s at stake?

4. CREATING A SYMBOLIC LINK BETWEEN TEXTS AND READERS

  • a definition of the symbolic (Lacan’s example of a door and its uses outside of binary open/closed)
    • what are the conditions for this symbolic link to resonate and persevere?
  • what strategies can be adopted to initiate and maintain this?
    • associating texts with the people who read, annotate, and discuss them
      • orating/printing written & oral discourse around texts - how can these be published?
    • shifting power relations from top-down to bottom-up models of library infrastructure
    • supporting the sociability of libraries through
      • collectively organised cataloguing and classifying systems
      • bootlegging and "unofficial" publishing practices
      • localised distribution methods

Bibliography

Austin, J.L., Urmson, J.O., 1971. How to do things with words: the William James lectures delivered at Harvard University in 1955, Oxford paperbacks. Oxford Univ. Press, London.

Bangma, A. and Piet Zwart Instituut (eds.) (2009) Resonant bodies, voices, memories. Berlin: Revolver Publ.

Burroughs, W.S., 1970. The Electronic Revolution. Expanded Media Editions, Gottingen.

Butler, J., 2014. Gender trouble: feminism and the subversion of identity : Tenth Anniversary Edition. Routledge, London ; New York.

Carrion, U., 1980. Second Thoughts. VOID Distributors, Amsterdam. https://monoskop.org/log/?p=14521

Connor, S., 2000. Dumbstruck: a cultural history of ventriloquism. Oxford University Press, Oxford ; New York.

Cramer, F., 'Language' in Fuller, M. (Ed.), 2008. Software studies: a lexicon, Leonardo books. MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.

Dolar, M., 2006. A voice and nothing more, Short circuits. MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.

Flusser, V. and Ströhl, A. (2002) Writings. Electronic mediations v. 6. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Gitelman, L., 1999. Scripts, grooves, and writing machines: representing technology in the Edison era. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif.

Hall, S., 'Encoding, Decoding' in During, S. (Ed.), 1999. The cultural studies reader, 2nd ed. ed. Routledge, London ; New York.

Hayles, N.K., 2005. My mother was a computer: digital subjects and literary texts. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago ; London.

Ong, W.J., Hartley, J., 2012. Orality and literacy: the technologizing of the word, 30th anniversary ed.; 3rd ed. Routledge, London ; New York.

Pennycook, A., 2008. 'English As A Language Always In Translation' in European Journal of English Studies. 12. 33-47. 10.1080/13825570801900521. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/233322759_English_As_A_Language_Always_In_Translation

Zuckerman, E., 2013. Digital cosmopolitans: why we think the internet connects us, why it doesn’t, and how to rewire it. W.W. Norton & Company, New York.