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Your email contribution to Open Book came over loud and clear John, amid a
number of other email ripostes to Will Self and quite a good, constructive
debate in the studio. I particularly liked the contributions by writer Dreda
Say Mitchell.   

 

Folk who missed it, it's on the iplayer and starts 16 minutes into the show.


 

******************
Bruce Royan   http://www.linkedin.com/in/bruceroyan
41 Greenhill Gardens, Edinburgh, EH10 4BL
+44 131 4473151         +44 77 1374 4731  
"Je suis Marxiste, tendence Groucho"
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From: Library and Information Professionals
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of John Dolan
Sent: 25 March 2011 15:30
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: FW: Open book. Closed libraries

 

Last Sunday I mailed round the rushed, frustrated email (below) that I sent
to R4's Open Book after hearing the interview with Will Self.

 

I had a call from Open Book to say they'd had a lot of responses, from both
librarians and others.

 

They will be broadcasting mine and others in this Sunday's programme.

 

John   

 

 

John Dolan OBE, BA, Dip Lib, MCLIP

 

E.  <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]

Tw. @johnrdolan

T. 0121 476 4258

M. 07508 204200

  _____  

From: Library and Information Professionals
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of John Dolan
Sent: 20 March 2011 16:41
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Open book. Closed libraries

 

More uninformed opinion in the interest of debate on BBC's Open Book. I
haven't time to rehearse what might have irritated me most but I wrote
something like this, 

 

I'm a librarian and I'm seething and frustrated as I listen to Will Self
(normally a hero) talking about libraries and the challenges. I would be
more than willing to talk to you. I don't have a jobsworth mentality and
there's plenty to be said about libraries and the huge worth they bring, or
could bring to individuals, families and communities. They are about reading
but not just literary novels and the scope they offer for information and
learning is huge but not covered by a narrow - but yes, wonderful - literary
purpose. (Even so I often wonder at how rarely they are referred to on Open
Book and there's *never* a librarian!) There are many libraries that have
modern services and facilities, both on site and online, offer reading
programmes and informal learning and information - not just that 'on the
web' but authoritative information that has to be paid for (like the old
reference book) and which few could afford. Contrary to popular myth, all
libraries provide web access. It should be free (as in free information) and
the library should be a hive of creative activity commensurate with its
location and size. There are some like this; there should be more.

 

And why is there *never* a librarian on Open Book. Did research not reveal
CILIP, Voices for the Library or even the Guardian ... trouble with such
programmes is they behave as though they are the first and start from
scratch; there is no cumulative 'learning' so every programme is as if
nothing has been on the media before.

 

 

John 

 

John Dolan OBE, BA, Dip Lib, MCLIP

 

E.  <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]

Tw. @johnrdolan

T. 0121 476 4258

M. 07508 204200

 

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