Oh No! Nobody Reads! Oh No! It's Too Cheap For Everyone To Read!
from the accessibility-is-a-good-thing dept
We recently wrote about how booksellers were freaking out over the "price war" between Amazon and Wal-Mart, whereby they're starting to offer certain books at a very cheap price to bring in more customers. The whole thing was a bit silly. Reader Robin Trehaeven alerts us to a fantastic opinion piece in the Library Journal by Barbara Fister, a librarian at Gustavus Adolphus College, in which she does a superb job mocking what she refers to as the "accessibility paradox" where those who are used to being gatekeepers to information at the same time as they're supposedly promoting the benefits of greater information, suddenly start whining when information really does get more accessible. This includes those booksellers:I'm also taken aback by the horrified response of the book industry. I thought the big crisis was that nobody reads. Now it turns out the problem is that books are so popular with the masses they're being used as bait to draw in shoppers.But most of her brilliant sarcasm is directed at those in her own profession, who both work hard to get information for free, at the same time they complain about how the internet has made it so easy to route around librarians:
Come on, guys, get your story straight! Which is it?
It strikes me that this issue is somewhat parallel to the love-hate relationship that many academic librarians have had with the Internet. Although our complicated relationship is improving, there are still some silly assumptions floating around. Oh no, our reference stats are down! Hurrah! People are able to find answers without our help. That's awesome! Anybody can publish on the web, unlike scholarly journals which are peer-reviewed. Fine, but don't tell me all peer-reviewed journal articles are shining examples of reason and academic brilliance. A lot of them are finely-sliced research rehashing the same findings, or are closely examined and exquisitely detailed trivia. Besides, there are plenty of examples of peer review failing in spectacular ways--and examples of wonderful peer-reviewed journals that were born free online.It's a great overall column, and nice to see a librarian lay the smackdown on hypocrisy within the bookselling and librarian worlds.
But this is my favorite: Unlike information you find on the web, we pay for the information in our databases, and you get what you pay for. No, actually, with what you pay for you get a lot of junk that you don't even want, but you have no choice.
You want this journal? You have to subscribe to this pricey bundle. Either that, or you purchase one article at a time for your users, something more and more libraries are doing. You spend less, but the information never visits the library--it goes straight from the publisher to the desk of one user. All the library gets is the bill. Apart from failing on its merits, the argument that paid is better than free is self-contradicting. We can't tell students that purchased information is by definition better than free and, at the same time, beg faculty to recognize how broken the current system is and please, please, please make their work open access.
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Filed Under: barbara fister, books, information, libraries, open access, prices, reading
Reader Comments
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I think it's hilarious that I can go to the library and take out as many books and movies as I want.
For free!
I wonder how long this unsustainable business model can last?
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Oh, you mean through taxation. Oh well, I suppose you're right on that point. Although I would rather have my tax dollars go to funding the freedom to gain knowledge than the freedom to blow up an Afghan wedding party.
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You sir, are being extremely disengenous and short-changing the grand super awesomeness of our elected leaders. They are NOT using tax money to blow up an Afghan wedding, dammit.
It's MANY weddings.
Oh, and they do funeral services too....
Pretty much anytime they can be sure kill some kids with their little video game weapons....
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libraries obsolete = librarians obsolete
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Re: libraries obsolete = librarians obsolete
Because, everybody can afford books, and internet, and educational films, and specialty books that you may only need once in a while which are filled with information which has not yet made it's way to the web...
Libraries, pfth! Off with their heads!!
( /sarcasm )
As long as we have poor people (and we want to give them the opportunity to better themselves) then we really should continue to maintain libraries.
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Re: Re: libraries obsolete = librarians obsolete
Although, it still would likely mean less funding since there is such a large number of people who can access information online. After all, even those with cheap dial-up could access the books.
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Re: Re: Re: libraries obsolete = librarians obsolete
If you want to gauge just how obsolete libraries have become in your community, try this experiment:
Show up at the next city council meeting and demand that all library funding be withheld on the grounds that they have been rendered obsolete. Just remember to wear a bullet-proof vest when you do.
Although people like me and you may not have set foot in a library since we were children, they are still seen as very useful and cost-effective (in terms of return on educational investment over the long term) resources in many communities.
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Brilliant
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Re: Brilliant
Travel Agents: They once thought their only value was to enable access to the back-end ticketing and booking systems for air, hotel and car rental. Wrong.
Real Estate Agents: Once thought that their only value was providing access to listing databases to help clients search for homes that are on the market. Wrong.
Librarians: Need to think hard about where they can continue to provide value in a world where the access costs to books and other media is shrinking. A librarian who thinks that their only role is providing access to expensive books, they are on a path to extinction.
Services like children's reading programs, puppet shows, and yes - free internet access for low income users - are all part of that value chain. The migration path librarians is all about focusing on where they add real value.
I'm sure there are some smarties in that bunch who'll figure it out.
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Academic versus Public libraries
Also, most librarians are excited about how much the public can access for free and encourage it. Most are also frustrated with overpriced academic databases that provide information and articles that can be readily found online.
Lastly, most librarians understand our role as a service. We provide books, information, and assistance where they would otherwise have to pay for it. Most people cannot afford to buy every book, every piece of information, or for the help and advice they need, but they can get it free from the library. (Yes this is tax supported, but the average person probably pays very little annually for their local library service).
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You slackjawed yokel
Libraries have been around for a looooooooooong time. It's NOT a business - it's a government service.
Put down the GameBoy and go to the library and get free books...
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Re: You slackjawed yokel
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Coincidentally apropos XKCD comic?
(Yes, I realise the comic is mostly about something else. The coincidence in reading this article and that comic within an hour of each still amuses me)
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It's whichever will make them the most $$$ - they'll change it as necessary. Facts aren't important.
I hate Wal-Mart with a passion - so it's Amazon, Barnes and Noble or another bookseller for me - but most of the books I read - I get from the library.
I'm surprised they aren't bitching more about libraries yet.
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