User:Simon/Making it public Keeping it private: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Chained books.jpeg|150px|thumb|Chained books at the medieval Hereford Library]] | |||
see also [[User:Simon/Human reading|human reading]], [[User:Simon/Inter-depending|inter-depending]], [[User:Simon/Scanning|scanning]] | see also [[User:Simon/Human reading|human reading]], [[User:Simon/Inter-depending|inter-depending]], [[User:Simon/Scanning|scanning]] | ||
Revision as of 19:52, 2 June 2020
making it public/keeping it private
see also human reading, inter-depending, scanning
The library depends on its public, just as the public depends on the library. Sharing of texts is the heart of library culture. A completely private collection lacks sociability. Libraries that operate outside of the law (shadow/extra-legal/pirate/+++) also depend on tactics to survive, such as password protection and invite-only systems for registering new users. In this context, publishing is not broadcasting, scattering seeds of information widely to encourage maximal distribution. The public sphere created by the library is limited by necessary measures designed to sustain it.
Image: Chained books at the medieval Hereford Library, an illustration from Streeter, B. H., (1931) The Chained Library; A Survey of Four Centuries in the Evolution of the English Library, B. Franklin : New York [1970]