Showing posts with label introductions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label introductions. Show all posts

Monday, September 6, 2010

Introduction and reflections

I’m Emily. I’m blogging under a pseudonym here (not a very deep one – EHLM are my initials) because I’ve recently had a couple of short stories published, and I didn’t want anyone who might possibly be googling my name (wishful thinking, most likely) to come across this – not that I’m ashamed of anything I would potentially write here, but I didn’t want the sense of having to write “with the windows wide open” (to misquote Vonnegut) to make me start censoring or circumscribing my thoughts. Since I'm the only Emily on the course list (or I was when I checked yesterday), I expect you guys should be able to find me to communicate as necessary.

My background is strong in philosophy (I was a philosophy/English double major as an undergrad), but I mostly did philosophy of science and took only one ethics course, though I am familiar with a number of the philosophers Fallis mentions (Foote, Locke, Kant, Aristotle...). After being out of school for a couple of years, I arrived at library school as one of those people who doesn’t have any previous experience in the biz. I’m on campus in Madison, and this is my first online course.

I was also struck by how prescient Mill seemed to be – and how funny. I was especially struck by his fifth footnote, about the toleration of religion meaning the toleration of Christianity but not Islam, despite Islam being “the faith of a hundred millions of British subjects” (p. 30 in the printed edition I used). We wouldn’t know anything about that in the US, would we? I was also struck by how closely Fallis’s reasoning for why we need information ethics classes mirrored Mill’s third and fourth points about why freedom of information is important.

Puttnam I am skeptical of for a number of reasons – he seems to have a particular ideological axe to grind (viz. being in the TV industry) which I don’t especially trust, a lot of his predictions regarding the use of technology in education have not come true (we do use more technology in education, but definitely not in the ways he suggests), and his comment on libraries (p. 5) were really more like “Why can’t video stores be more like libraries?” instead of offering much in the way of insights into libraries themselves. Interestingly, I think video stores are now more like libraries – not Blockbuster, which is dying out (for some reason we’ve nicknamed it “Lackluster” in my family), but places like Netflix, which is able to easily provide anyone with anything, pretty much (n.b., I don’t use Netflix, but I just looked at the website and they definitely have programs which would never be available at Blockbuster, so I feel justified in saying this).

However, on p. 8 (I know we weren’t supposed to read this far, I got carried away) he does make a useful point, saying “I genuinely believe that we don’t live, and haven’t during my lifetime lived, in a fully educated or empowered society.” If there is one thing that librarians can do in the future to make the world a better place, I would say that it is to help connect people with the resources that they need – the information is out there, people just don’t know about it, and don’t know how to get at it. This is the same point that Fallis makes about the mission of library professionals (p. 1).

As respects his line about the muddying of the boundary between entertainment and news, I couldn’t agree more. Not just because of the advent of reality TV, but because a huge portion of my demographic group gets its news from The Daily Show or The Colbert Report, and Glenn Beck considers himself to be more of an entertainer who “could give a flying crap about the political process” (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36270594/ns/business-forbescom/).

In general, I suspect that Puttnam, based on his Aristotle quote and his answer to the last question posed on page 9 (goes onto page 10) is a bit more interested in censorship than I am (and than Mill is). He seems to come pretty close to actually advocating censorship in some situations, which is a difficult position to defend.