DIYnamic: Librarians in Motion – CLA Be the Change 2014

Transcript:


As a librarian and poet, it���s long been of interest to me to find


new ways of providing and sustaining democratized access to


poetry. So – when I found myself in my final year of my MLIS


enrolled in collection development while simultaneously


volunteering at the Poetry Center & American Poetry Archives


at San Francisco State University, synapses ignited. I


began to consider the inherent vulnerabilities of cultural


agency within poetry as a network of ideas reflecting


currencies of our time and began to wonder who


decides what gets saved to tell the stories we leave behind.


Along with digital preservation threats like data loss and bit


corruption, I considered the ephemerality &


vulnerability of poetry chapbooks produced by small presses.


I also sought means of reinvigorating stale & arcane


poetry collections I had found in many public libraries, and


desired a new method of expanding access to socially &


culturally diverse poetry along with promoting work of local


poets in the community. The confluence of my studies and


passions for poetry and librarianship catalyzed my creation


and development of an open-access digital chapbook archives:


The Poetry Center Chapbook Exchange.


The Poetry Center Chapbook Exchange is a communitycurated


archive created and developed for poets to convene,


correspond, and collaborate via chapbooks: the


currency of the poetry community. Our mission is to engage


our poetry community by sparking dialogues between the


chapbooks in the interest of collaboratively building


a community archive.


As a cooperative model, it has facilitated the compilation of a


diverse and innovative collection of poetry chapbooks for


public access. We began by inviting a select group of


core contributors ��� and grew our collection in just a few


months to feature chapbooks from over 40 contributors.


The Process


Contributors are invited to share their chapbooks via upload


and as such gain access to the chapbook repository. They are


also invited to recommend another poet to contribute to the


exchange. The model is ���take a chapbook, leave a


chapbook.��� The chapbook exchange is a contributor-driven


peer-to-peer environment that allows users to exchange


chapbooks as a variation on the pay-to-play theme in that in


this case, poetry is the currency required for participation.


Deploying Chapbooks as Community-Bonding Tools


Chapbooks have a long history of communicating impelling


messages to communities. ���From the 16th to early


19th centuries, chapbooks were mass-produced, cheaply made


booklets sold hand-to-hand by traveling salesmen, or chapmen


in Western Europe and North America.��� (Craig, 2011) Today���s


chapbooks are regarded as essential to the evolution of


ongoing dialogues around poetics and poetry.


������[They���re] part of ongoing poetic conversations, as well as a


practice of exchange that is ever present in the maintenance of


community��� (Craig, 2011). They are often handmade


and sold cheaply or given as gifts. The message within often


outweighs financial compensation for the author; often, what


fuels their tenacity is a desire to contribute to a powerful


lineage of poets as well as a commitment to correspondence


and collaboration with peers.


The Poetry Center Chapbook Exchange has made


available virtual hubs for collaboration and exchange. The


open-access format is conducive to quick and efficient


chapbook sharing, and can serve as a forum for writers and


other patrons to communicate and share ideas. Our


desire is for the site to act as a nexus; a lively and vital


cooperative space for poets to practice the continuum of


reading and writing in the creative process. Contributing


creative works in this forum also allows users the opportunity


to generate creative responses to extant works in the


collections.


As a community-curated project, Poetry Center Chapbook


Exchange participants are actively involved in the process of


archiving their own work. Once they become active members,


they are also able to assign metadata to their books with


pertinent descriptors to make their works more findable. In


doing so, they become agents in the shaping of our shared


history for future readers. Contributors also choose their own


creative commons licensing attributes and permissions, and


can permit or decline use in any number of ways.


The site was built using Omeka: ���a free, flexible,


and open source web-publishing platform for the display of


library, museum, archives, and scholarly collections and


exhibitions.��� (Ray Rosenzweig Center for History and New


Media, 2014). We chose Omeka as our trial platform because of


the Roy Rosenzweig and Center for History and New Media���s


great reputation for preserving and archiving creative works.


Omeka enables participants to control how their


work is presented, and offers tutorials to facilitate the user


process.


This type of peer-to-peer crowdsourcing can be a


means of promoting and increasing circulation for existing


poetry collections while directly engaging with local and


global communities. Libraries can improve poetry collections


by crowdsourcing chapbooks from local poetry communities


and expand awareness of collections using social media to


share chapbooks. A poetry project of this kind will serve all age


groups, and will be particularly vital for reengaging teens on


the move. Teens are mobile content creators. Libraries


recognize that ���if librarians want to attract young adults to


their collections and services, they must become integral


members of the online community.��� (Hassell and Miller, 2003)


Libraries have the opportunity to reshape their teen image by


creating virtual spaces where teens will feel free to collaborate,


create, consume, and share content with peers on the move. At


the same time, they can promote intergenerational bonding


between unlikely age groups.


As Tyckoson (2003) writes ���The nature of publishing is going


to change and libraries are going to play a greater part in the


process.��� Libraries can provide both the tools and the expertise


to help users get projects off the ground. Our communities are


rife with content creators, and the urge to share our creative


efforts has galvanized social media as a primary source of


information and communication. Outreach to local museums,


archives, community colleges, and K-12 schools may also be a


way to develop existing collections reflective of the local


community. By incorporating works by local poets and writers,


public libraries can involve users directly by showcasing


selected works to ensure patron���s continual value in the future


of library service.���Community practitioners need to know how


given communities tell stories and how powerful these stories


can be for either demoralizing or strengthening


community.��� (Collins et al, 2004)


Flexibility


Like any project, the initial concept for the chapbook exchange


went through several iterations requiring flexibility and


patience. Initially designed for public libraries & later


conceptualized for an archives within an academic institution,


it was necessary to consider how this might change the target


audience and/or create a more insular reader community,


thereby possibly inhibiting access to the ���average public


library user.��� While the Poetry Center Chapbook Exchange is


publicly accessible via URL: poetrychapbooks.omeka.net, the


predominant audience is largely comprised of other poets.


How I hope to mitigate this problem & expand access for nonpoets


is to recommend the chapbook exchange as a discovery


tool teachers can employ in the classroom to promote active


learning, collaboration, and creative problem solving through


reading & writing poetry along with navigating new


technologies. Creating student collections in Omeka can also


help learners discover primary resources along with growing


their interests in history and technology. I���m interested in


encouraging & teaching information & media literacies


through diversified tech tools to augment, support, & partner


with local schools to best serve youth in our community.


Connecting learners with the right tools is critical to their


academic success.


In creating, developing, and managing the digital archive that


became the Poetry Center Chapbook Exchange, I was able to


gain project management skills that prepared me for my role as


the new Teen & Adult Services Librarian with Mendocino


County Libraries. Along with creating engaging programming


and services for teens and adults, managing projects effectively


is key to my ability to provide energetic and efficient services to


all our patrons.


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Published on November 28, 2014 15:01
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