Oracle: Librarian of Prey

Entries tagged as ‘my so-called life’

9 lords a-blogging, who’s who in the UK and Ook!

March 17, 2008 · 5 Comments

I ain’t dead. [1]

[insert apology about time, the lack of; MSc. eating life, perils of working practically full-time while studying full-time as well]

  • Lords of the Blog: Nine Peers of the House of Lords have joined the world of the legal blogs. Although the blog only officially opened this morning, there’s already plenty of content - inc. two interesting posts by Lord Norton on media representation of the HoL - and a survey they’d like you to take. No discussion as of yet but I am sure that will change shortly.
  • Connie Crosby has collected the Library Journal’s Movers and Shakers for 2008 together into one handy (and readable!) list. Obviously US/Canada-centric but there’s some fascinating profiles and familiar names.

    But it does beg the question: who are the movers and shakers in UK librarianship? I read a lot of library blogs but with the exception of the legal librarians blogs, America and Canada outweigh the UK, so the news and advances and shiny things often come to me as either irreverent to my situation or are generally just inaccessible because they only apply to an entirely different place. Am I just not looking in the right places? Rec me some UK librarian blogs, please!

  • And finally, on both a personal and a librarian note: Match it for Pratchett is a fan run attempt to match Terry Pratchett’s £500,000 donation to Alzheimer’s Research. This is a subject extremely close to my heart, both as a fan of Pterry and his world (if I hadn’t gone for Batgirl, the chance that this blog would have been called ‘Oook!’ is extremely high! I am rather fond of the librarian) and as someone who has lost members of my family to Alzheimer’s, so if you have some spare change, please consider throwing it their way.

1. Apologies to Pterry…

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2008 & Belated Hogswatch present ideas

January 2, 2008 · 1 Comment

And would you look at that - it’s 2008. Happy New Year!

I’m currently up to my eyeballs in essays (2 down, 3 to go) so things will remain quiet around here for a wee bit more. My [lack of] academic organisation, let me show you it. Sigh. It’s one of my goals for 2008 to be more organised in general and specifically in academia, which you’d think I’d be better at the second time round, but no.

Instead, I shall leave you with the hope that 2008 is a excellent year for you and this thought: Is it to late to hope that the Hogfather will bring me this boardgame as a belated Hogswatch present?

How can I resist “the world’s first board game about books which comes with your own bookshelf, library card, bookshop, and your own set of tiny books to collect.” How?

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Happy Hogswatch

December 19, 2007 · No Comments

I’m off on my annual trip back to the Batcave shortly and thus silence shall reign here for a wee bit. May be on twitter, depending on how my essay related procrastination tactics go but otherwise, have a Happy Hogswatch.

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Happy Birthday, Blogs!

December 18, 2007 · No Comments

Weblogs rack up a decade of posts

I started blogging in 1999 and I’ve moved in and out of it (although I have always had some form of blog) and used a variety of different blogging tools (hand coded, scribble.nu, blogger, greymatter, livejournal, movable type, wordpress) over the years.

In some ways, the internet is my memory.

If I feel like embarrassing myself, I’ll have a poke about in my backups and see if I can’t find any of the scanned articles about blogs that I took part in.

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Return of/Why Libraries?

December 3, 2007 · 2 Comments

Oh, I had plans. I was going to be organised and have several posts waiting in the wings before I started posting again but then I started thinking about things too much and the next thing I knew, I had the blogging equivalent of stage fright and the only real way to break that is to just post, regardless.

The best laid plans of mice (and men!).

So, hi. It’s Barbara Gordon, you may remember me from such blogs as Batgirl was a Librarian /The Simpsons rip-off. I had to abruptly stop posting partially because time was not on my side and partly because I was dealing with a mild case of internet harassment (nothing particularly serious but more than I wanted/or had time to deal with.)

But I’m back and while time is not exactly plentiful (What’s that? Time to chose my thesis topic already? Aiee!) I have slightly more of it. And anything relevant you wanted to know about me can be found on the About page. So there’s that.

I’m almost finished with my first semester of my Library and Information Studies Masters and as part of my degree, I’ve been lucky enough to have the opportunity to listen to some very interesting speakers on the subject of Library and Information Management. In fact, the final speaker for this semester was Ian Snowley, the out-going president of CILIP (and you can read his blog here) and he was talking in particular about the future of libraries and librarians/information professionals, something that I have to think about a lot, both personally and professionally.

One of the questions he asked us was: Why are we librarians?

It’s interesting question!

Myself? For me, librarianship is a career change. I come from a very technical background - I worked in and around the IT industry as a web designer/codemonkey/technical support for most of my late teens/early twenties and chose an undergraduate degree that while softer than traditional technical degrees was still going to get me into more work along the same lines as pre-university. But by the time I finished my BSc. I’d burnt out on the IT industry and was staring down my graduation date with absolutely no idea where or what I was going to do after that.

So I started considering other careers. I’d always been a voracious reader and as a child, I spent a lot of time in various libraries. I’d learnt how to play the system at Uni - 5 month-long loan copies of the core textbook and approx. 150 students? Ahahaha! Guess who always got a copy? - and I’d always been an information/object organiser. I have a hobby where I actively worked as an archivist for several years and in my second year of my degree I had the opportunity to do an internship abroad where I worked for a digital archiving company in the Czech Republic. I wrote my dissertation on archives and archiving in online subcultures.

Suddenly my career path looked a lot clearer. I applied and interviewed for several Graduate Traineeships before ending up at Gotham Library and after working in a library for a year, I had pretty much decided that yes, this was the career for me. (And as for my choice of specialisation? Well, one of the other options considered was taking a conversion degree and going into IP law, which is a particular area of interest of mine. Thankfully, I realised before I did anything there that I would make an *awful* lawyer and thus the legal system was mostly spared. Heh.)

I realise that not everyone who may read this blog will be a librarian but for those of you that are - why? What made you throw your lot in with the rapidly changing world of information management? I am but the cat to curiosity.

Categories: curiosity catalogued the cat · librarianship
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