Our Enduring Values Revisited: Librarianship in an Ever-Changing World—eEditions e-book

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ALA Member
$32.40
Price
$36.00
Item Number
9780838913055
Published
2015
Publisher
ALA Editions
Pages
256
Format
eBook
Samples

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  • Description
  • Table of Contents
  • About the author
  • Reviews

In the almost 15 years since Our Enduring Values was published, there has been a sea change in the way much of the world thinks about and uses libraries. Young librarians and seasoned LIS professionals alike are experiencing increasing pressure to adjust to new economic, societal, and technological demands amidst the often-dire rhetoric currently surrounding the future of our institutions. In this stirring manifesto, public intellectual, librarian, and philosopher Gorman addresses head on the "existential panic" among library professionals caused by the radical shift in how libraries are viewed. He reconnects readers with the core values that continue to inspire generations of library professionals and scholars—while making the case that these values are doubly crucial to hold on to in the brave new shifting world of librarianship. Destined to become another classic of library literature, this book explores such contemporary issues as

  • The growing emphasis of the library as a cultural institution, placing libraries within their cultural context as gathering places for learning, access to information, and community
  • The impact of technological innovations on core values such as access and stewardship
  • Library places and spaces of the future
  • How the mass digitization of books, archives, and other materials affects the purpose and function of libraries
  • Intellectual freedom and privacy in the era of the PATRIOT Act, Wikileaks, and Edward Snowden
  • The role of libraries as both champions and facilitators of social justice

Inspirational yet clear-sighted, Gorman emphatically reaffirms the importance of libraries and librarians while proposing a path for future survival and growth.

 AcknowledgmentsPreface  Chapter OneValues  Chapter TwoHistory and Philosophy Chapter Three Value Chapter Four Library as Place Chapter Five Stewardship Chapter Six Service Chapter Seven Intellectual Freedom  Chapter Eight Rationalism Chapter Nine Literacy and Learning Chapter Ten Equity of Access Chapter Eleven Privacy Chapter Twelve Democracy Chapter Thirteen The Greater Good Chapter Fourteen Keeping Faith 

Michael Gorman

Michael Gorman, dean of libraries at California State University at Fresno, has worked in libraries for some four decades on two continents. He is coauthor with Walt Carwford of the best-selling Future Libraries: Dreams, Madness, and Reality (ALA Editions, 1995). A shaper of the Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, he has won numerous awards and honors, including the Melvil Dewey Medal.

"An impressively presented compendium of original scholarship that is as informed and informative as it is thoughtful and thought-provoking ... should be required reading by all students of library science, as well as both novice and seasoned libraries."  

— Reviewer's Bookwatch

"Sure to cause a great amount of introspection ... a must-have for all librarians, from all areas."
— VOYA

"Present[s] much to contemplate on the values librarians attempt to uphold. His views are not black and white; rather he delights in exploring the areas of nuanced decision-making in libraries … Highly recommended for circulating and professional collections in all libraries."
— ARBA

"Rather than using each value for the purpose of self-examination, he transforms them into specific rallying points for those who work in libraries in relation to the communities they serve. Moreover, these calls for advocacy are neither hierarchically driven, nor should they wait for the ‘usual suspects' of allies to meet and incorporate them into their agendas. Gorman encourages librarians, support staff, administrators, assistants, pages, and volunteers to tell their own stories about the value of libraries … should be required reading for all library workers who have made this field their career and also library school students on the verge of starting their own careers. This is a work that holds steadfast in reinforcing the values that are important to the community of libraries, values that become part of the core consciousness of library workers."
— Technical Services Quarterly