Showing posts with label literacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label literacy. Show all posts

Sunday 22 October 2023

Remembering Librarianship Past

 What has happened to the time-honoured scholarly side of librarianship? Even in the 1980s, at the UBC School of Librarianship there was still an assumption that librarianship had something to do with books, reading, literacy and scholarship. There was recognition of the historic role of public libraries in extending knowledge free of charge to the populace. Libraries were agents of democracy, free speech, and equal access to information. 

And now, in the 2020s? Judging from the Agenda of the Burnaby Public Library’s Board, libraries are no longer distributors of diverse information but arbiters of “misinformation”. They appoint themselves judge and gatekeeper of what the public should be allowed to read, in print and on-line.


Some libraries have or intend to have Social Workers on staff, as well as extra security staff prepared for “trauma-informed incidents” in the branches. They used to provide research material about drugs and addiction, now they provide the drugs  – onsite. They provide “safety”: safe spaces for the racialized, indigenous, those in need of “equity, diversity and inclusion”, those feeling “harmed” by other people’s ideas, and those needing a whole alphabet to define them (2SLGBTQIA … etc…) but not necessarily the alphabet used by the literate reader.


The public library is now much concerned with mental illness, but in its early days it was a zone of mental health, being a quiet peaceful place where patrons could wander among book shelves, calmly peruse a newspaper, borrow a book from the magical trove of novels, verse, and sundry non-fiction. Every citizen had access to the haven of literature in peaceful civil surroundings – a blessed retreat for those living in crowded quarters or blighted urban ghettos. 


Now the space for books has shrunk, while libraries find space (and budgets) for “non-traditional resources” such as video games, juggling kits, blood pressure cuffs, bike repair kits, radon detectors, vehicle diagnostic scanners, and ukuleles. Seriously. And this despite the fact that fully 48% of Canadians have inadequate literacy skills (according to the Conference Board of Canada). Instead of fretting about non-traditional resources and “non-binary” culture, why don’t libraries concern themselves once more with the literacy/illiteracy duality, and resources for bridging it?


As for novels, librarians now approach them with fear and suspicion in case they harbour non-correct thought or ideas that make others feel “triggered”. To trigger readers is the reason a writer goes to the effort of writing a book in the first place: to trigger imagination, new ideas, open-mindedness. Maybe, instead of appointing themselves the judges and censors of books, librarians should simply stock them all and let readers make up their own minds about them. Never mind "non-traditional resources" – diverse reading is what their taxpayer-based budget is for in the first place.


It’s time for public libraries to return to their core role as protectors of free speech and to be run by librarians, not social workers, not climate action leaders, not thought-police and anti-misinformation crusaders. The public are smart enough to figure out the information wars for themselves – if they can read. According to Statistics Canada, 49% of adult Canadians read below high-school literacy levels – immigrants, indigenous and low-income being the lowest. These are the very groups the library "social work" and mental health mission is particularly targeting. So both schools and public libraries are failing to deliver on their core responsibility: supplying books and advancing literacy.


Monday 6 February 2023

Trigger Warning

          This story may not be suitable for all readers. Mature subject matter:             reader discretion is advised.   

Caution: diverse viewpoints within

Strong language (politically non-correct): may offend some readers 

Novel concepts may be encountered

Characters may appear in this story who identify differently than you

You may not "see yourself" here

You may see others here

Characters in this story may include anti-hero as well as hero, an antagonist as well as protagonist

In this story, bad things might happen

This story might contain jokes

Read at your own risk: some readers have experienced broadening of mind 

Persons allergic to ideas are advised to shut this book immediately

            Call 111 if an Emergency Philosopher is needed




                    




Saturday 6 November 2021

Passive-Aggressive Punctuation Is Out To Make You Anxious

A well-known writer and reviewer shared some extraordinary opinions about punctuation as used in online text. Apparently there are new rules: 

"The period can feel so emphatic as to sound sarcastic. It can easily come across as passive-aggressive." Exclamation marks, however, "convey warmth and sincerity; failing to use them runs the risk of making the person you are messaging feel uncertain and anxious."

What. Nonsense. The kind of nonsense that makes one feel uncertain and anxious.

To some writers punctuation is king; it rules the pauses between the tumble of words, providing shape, enriching meaning. It's not about pandering to either warm or anxious "feelings" of readers. Martialing meaning is the whole point of the period (note the Latin for point: punctus). 

In British grammar the period is called a "full stop" because "to stop" comes from the Old English verb meaning "to stuff up or block". Drains for instance, and road traffic, get stopped at punctuated points of blockage. In prose these pauses are no bad thing. (It's handy in speaking too if you wish to stop for breath -- and don't you hate those people who talk in breathless! exclamation! marks!?) Only in a weather report is that okay (Warning! Snowstorm on highway!) Although maybe we also need a Bad Grammar signal: Warning! Illiteracy Ahead!

The comma too is essential, this word has Greek ancestry: "komma". Commas close off a clause with the "least degree of separation" (compared to the period or semi-colon which separate more decisively). With "clause" we're back to Latin and closing off: claudere is "to shut". 

So at the risk of making ourselves "feel uncertain and anxious" let's champion the full use of punctuation by everyone punctilious about the points they're making when they write. Of course, "texting" is something else, neither speech nor writing, and nothing to do with actual texts. "Text" also derives from Latin, textura meaning "relating to arrangement of threads, as in fabric, skin, rock, and literary work". 

So if you're saying anything beyond "me grunt, you snort" you need to arrange your threads of meaning, points, clauses, sentences and paragraphs according to punctuation. And if that idea makes you passive-aggressively anxious, just wait 'til we examine the role of the hyphen …






Saturday 5 September 2020

The Alphabet War

The world is "swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight/ where ignorant armies clash by night" wrote Matthew Arnold in Dover Beach in 1867. 

That was
the year Canada was born. However it was in 1867 England, in 2020 Canada "struggle and flight" seems a pretty wide-ranging war among alphabetical armies who fight with non-civil slogans slashed across walls in CAPITAL LETTERS. 

Ordinary people (you know who we are) are tired of constant confused alarms from BIPOC and LGBQT, tired of being told that ACAB, and that BLM (like all lives; we know). We feel like we're being sloganized to death by the PC with OCD, although we know we'll be labelled with all sorts of "-isms" for pointing it out. (So, best to speak as ANON, if at all.)

We're already tired of COVID, with it's self-isolating work-from-home blending of days into sameness and a sort-of-working, sort-of-alone lifestyle … We can't even keep that TGIF feeling we used to have at the end of the working week. How's the end different from the beginning and middle, now? What's a week, in life lived on  ZOOM and SKYPE?

So we're not in the mood-disorder for warfare via wall-splashing graffiti and text-abbreviation. Texting isn't writing, and slogans aren't thought. Capitalized abbreviations are sub-literate amputations for an ADHD generation.  If I see one more I'll get PTSD.

You might think that arrogant and don't want to hear my plea for peace and whole syllables, but nevertheless that's my final WORD, delivered, of course, as ANON. 

Please don't RSVP.

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This story is reproduced from LITERARY YARD, www.literaryyard.com, 2024/02/10 It's a common fairy-tale theme -- imprisonment in a tower ...