#LibraryWorkers

The American Library Association turns 150 – YouTube

American Library Association 11.1K subscribers

328 views Jan 8, 2026 #ForOurLibraries

2026 marks the 150th anniversary of the American Library Association. It’s a milestone that invites us to imagine the libraries of tomorrow, to advocate fiercely for open access to knowledge, and to invest in the infrastructure, both digital and human, that makes libraries a foundation of thriving communities. Celebrate, connect, and reflect with us all year at ALA150.org. #ForOurLibraries

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The American Library Association turns 150

American Library Association

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Continue/Read Original Article Here: The American Library Association turns 150 – YouTube

#150Years #ALA #AmericanLibraryAssociation #Celebrate #Connect #ForOurLibraries #ForOurLibraries2026 #Librarians #Libraries #LibraryWorkers #OneHundredFiftyYears #Professional #Transcript #Turns150YearsOld
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Library Writing Cooperativelibwrtcoop@glammr.us
2026-01-08

Happy 2026 #libraryworkers! If you made a resolution to write more in 2026, our next Monthly Writing Time is on the 16th! And if you have a draft you'd like some supportive feedback on, we've got friendly reviewers to help. Learn more: sites.google.com/uri.edu/libra

ALA Editions | Neal-Schumanalaeditionsns@glammr.us
2025-12-11

Get a discount code for 50% off "The Big Sourcebook of Free and Low-Cost Library Programming" at the ALA Store! It's waiting for you in the December issue of Libraries Rock Worlds, the ALA Editions monthly newsletter that gets you up to speed on the latest publications and happenings from around ALA. tinyurl.com/3yxhr2kh

#library #librarianship #americanLibraryAssociation #librarians #librarywork #libraryworkers

promo graphic for "The Big Sourcebook of Free and Low-Cost Library Programming"
2025-11-20

In just over an hour I'll discuss AI Editorial Policies with Brittany Paloma Fiedler & Imogen Clarke as part of a panel organized by the Library Publishing Coalition.

(We're representing
@libraryleadpipe & Ubiquity Press, respectively.)

It's at 9am Pacific / 10am Mountain / 12pm Eastern / 5pm UK today, 2025-11-20.

Hope you'll join us!

librarypublishing.org/upcoming

#AcademicPublishing #libraries #libraryWorkers

Workers at one of Ohio’s largest library systems set to unionize – Ohio Capital Journal

Workers at one of Ohio’s largest library systems set to unionize

Employees seek better health care benefits and pay amid an increased demand for library services

By: Susan Tebben – November 18, 2025 4:55 am

A sign in front of the Columbus Metropolitan Library. (Ohio Capital journal file photo.)

Workers from one of the biggest library systems in Ohio are establishing a labor union focused on improvements they say need to happen in areas such as wages and paid time off.

Employees with the Columbus Metropolitan Library have been working to form a union for the better part of a year, according to members participating in the effort, and planning to unionize with the Ohio Federation of Teachers.

For Jude Virostko, an adult services librarian at the library system’s South High branch, growing up in Coshocton meant being a “library kid,” something that fed into her thirst for knowledge and desire to be a librarian.

“I was at my library every chance I got,” Virostko said. “It was a place where I felt safe when that wasn’t necessarily the case in other places.”

She “wanted to be that safe space” after she moved to Columbus and has been in libraries every since.

“Libraries are an essential part of a functioning democracy,” Virostko said, as they face funding challenges on the state and federal level.

But being a librarian has “become a little bit more dangerous,” according to Megan Sheeran, a librarian at the Columbus library’s main location in downtown Columbus.

She has watched as the library has become a place for all people to come and feel welcomed, but also a place where staff are asked to do more than ever before.

“Some have been threatened and assaulted,” Sheehan said. “People are honestly having a really tough time and we’re on the frontlines being asked to help with that.”

About 630 workers are a part of the union’s bargaining unit, and the organizing committee has talked with more than half of union-eligible Columbus Metropolitan Library employees, with about 80% supportive of the efforts.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Workers at one of Ohio’s largest library systems set to unionize • Ohio Capital Journal

#betterHealthCare #columbusMetropolitanLibrary #largestLibrarySystem #libraryWorkers #libraryWorkersUnion #ohio #ohioCapitalJournal #paychecks #unionize

2025-08-26

Librarians, are you having discussions with your vendors about e-resource accessibility? Then check out our Core eForum coming up, where we're going to be chatting with everyone about just that!

ala.org/events/engaging-vendor

#EResources #Accessibility #Librarians #LibraryWorkers

ALA Editions | Neal-Schumanalaeditionsns@glammr.us
2025-06-10

We're excited to share recordings of "If We Could Have Just 10 Minutes of Your Time," a trio of virtual events packed with practical tips and expert guidance from a range of thought-leaders! alastore.ala.org/10minutes

#ALA #AmericanLibraryAssociation #LIS #MLIS #libraries #librarianship #InformationScience #librarywork #libraryWorkers

The image is an advertisement for "Edi and Neal's Book Club," highlighting a special edition taking place in May 2025. The top section has a light purple background with bold black and pink text that reads, "If We Could Just Have Ten Minutes of Your Time, All Library Workers! Edi and Neal’s BOOK CLUB." There is a small logo in the top right corner with a colorful illustration of an owl and a giraffe, accompanied by the text "ALA Editions Neal-Schuman." Below it, on a bright orange background, there is a label stating, "Special Edition | May 2025."

The middle section introduces the event with orange text: "A Series of Short Presentations Followed by a Post-Show Big Talk, featuring the authors of." Five book covers are displayed in a row at the bottom of the image. From left to right, the titles are: "Well-being in the Library Workplace," "Winning Grants," "The Experimental Library," "Inspiring Teens, Tweens, and Families to Make a Difference in the World," and "Creating Fundable Grant Proposals." Each book cover has unique, colorful designs and illustrations.
stephen m 🍞🌹🇵🇸marxistvegan@union.place
2025-05-20

Library Management 101: Why Catalog how things work when you can instead waste money to figure out how things work
#Library #LibraryLife #LibraryWorkers

Library Writing Cooperativelibwrtcoop@glammr.us
2025-05-13

Hey #libraryworkers! We’re hosting a free panel to help you overcome those pesky writing obstacles that prevent you from sharing your awesome ideas, work, and/or research with others. Please join us June 9th at 3 Eastern. Learn more and register at bit.ly/LWCpanel2025

A Library Writing Cooperative panel event... OVERCOMING OBSTACLES, CELEBRATING SUCCESS ~ Monday June 9, 2025 12pm PT/1pm MT/2pm CT/3pm ET

Register for the Zoom link at: bit.ly/LWCpanel2025
2025-04-11

Happening now, VIUFA members attending:

CAUT Webinar: Workload Strategies and Support for Librarians and Archivists  // Wébinaire de l'ACPPU: Charge de travail - Stratégies et soutien pour les bibliothécaires et les archivistes

#solidarity #UnionStrong #CAUTLIB #FPSE #libraryWorkers

stephen m 🍞🌹🇵🇸marxistvegan@union.place
2025-02-28
' BPE N
Stacy Miles Haponiksmh@library.love
2025-01-13

"Urban Librarians Unite" is hosting a peer support network for those affected by the California wildfires, or those working with affected communities.

Tuesday January 14th at 5:30 PT or
Saturday January 18th at 1pm PT.

Register at www.libraryworkersupport.org

#wildfires #california #californiawildfires #library #libraryworkers

Flyer repeating information from the post
2024-11-01

Librarians with an ALA-accredited Master’s degree, or equivalent, from all types of libraries are encouraged to participate in a survey measuring wellbeing at work for librarians

🔗 umanitoba.libwizard.com/f/well

#LibraryWorkers

Love, learning, and all the rest: Fictional libraries in “Fruits Basket” and beyond

In the third episode of Fruits Basket, an unamed schoolgirl confesses to Yuki in the library and he pushes her off.

Before watching Fruits Basket, an anime which mixes the romantic comedy, slice-of-life, and supernatural genres, I knew there was a librarian character (voiced by Sayumi Watabe). I was not aware, however, that libraries would have an important role in the series, at least in a few episodes. In this post, I’ll examine the scenes in Fruits Basket, and connect it to other posts on this blog.

In the third episode of Fruits Basket, a schoolgirl confesses to Yuki Soma (voiced by Nobunaga Shimazaki) in the library and he pushes her off. She is disappointed, saying he is closed off to most people and asks why he can’t let her in. The truth is that if women hug him, then he turns into an animal, a rat to be specific. The schoolgirl, understandably runs off, sad and likely crying, leaving him standing in the library. As it turns out, Tohru Honda (voiced by Manaka Iwami ), who is living at his house, tells him later that she is happy that he let her in, making him happy. The impact of this library scene is a strong one, even though the scene is pretty short.

In some ways, I can relate this to a few issues of the romantic slice-of-life webcomic, Literary Link. The protagonist, Faye, gets a community service job at the local public library’s literary club, due to a fighter in school, and meets a girl named Atlas. As would be expected, Faye falls in love with Atlas, after she teases her a bit, and agrees to keep volunteering at the literary club. Although Atlas isn’t sure if Faye will return, she does, making her happy, especially when she brings cupcakes, and Atlas bandages Faye up from an earlier fight. [1]

Literary Link and Fruits Basket are relatively different from other depictions of romance within libraries that I’ve noted on this blog. In The Truman Show (1998) and Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay (2008), which I wrote about in the early days of this blog, the libraries play a big role in the stories of each film. In the first film, it is pivotal moment for Truman Burbank, as he meets the woman he loves, Sylvia, and runs out from the library with her to a secluded beach. In the second film, Harold remembers how he met his ex-girlfriend, Vanessa, in the library. Both of them, in line with the fact the film is a stoner comedy, smoke pot in the library, even though it isn’t allowed.

There are many other examples of love, and romance, within libraries, whether Luz’s crush on Amity (which is later canonized) in The Owl House, Sophia beginning to confess her love to Catarina in My Next Life as a Villainess: All Routes Lead to Doom!, an almost-kiss between Shizuma and Nagisa in the Strawberry Panic! episode “Etoile”, and Fumi and Sugimoto kissing in an episode of Whispered Words (“Adolescence is Beautiful”). There are other instances of love being expressed inside of library walls, including a bun-wearing librarian shushing male students who are expressing their romance in the library.

Student librarian checks out materials for Tohru

The second time that libraries appear in the series is a short scene at the end of the fourth episode, when Tohru checks out books from the library about vegetable gardens and martial arts, so she can learn about what Yuki and Kyo like and dislike. She hopes to find “hidden sides” of them. Not long after, she ends up dropping these books, dramatically, when she learns that her Grandpa’s place is now ready for her to move back in. As it turns out, she doesn’t want to go back, but she decides she has to, although she is later saved by Yuki and Kyo in the following episode. This library scene has the first librarian character in the series, the aforementioned librarian voiced by Sayumi Watabe. This librarian is a student library worker. She checks out the books for Tohru.

Such librarians are not unique in anime. I mentioned many of them in my post back in April, including one protagonist, Haruki, in the striking and moving anime film, I Want to Eat Your Pancreas. He ends up helping another protagonist, Sakura Yamauchi, who’s disabled and uses a wheelchair. He becomes her good friend and later her love interest. She works in the library alongside him. This example differs from school-age student librarians, library workers to be precise, who are almost exclusively female, shown in various series. [2]

Some of the more prominent and recurring student librarians include Hisami Hishishii in multiple episodes of R.O.D. the TV, protagonist Hanamaru Kunikida in Love Live! Sunshine!!, Yamada and Kosuda in B Gata H Kei, Azusa Aoi in Whispered Words, Fumi Manjōme in Aoi Hana / Sweet Blue Flowers, Fumio Murakumi in Girl Friend Beta, Himeko Agari in Komi Can’t Communicate, Chiyo Tsukudate in Strawberry Panic!, Sumireko Sanshokunin a.k.a. “Pansy” in Oresuki, and Anne and Grea in Manaria Friends. Of these characters, they are often said to be quiet, shy, hardworking, diligent, lonely, sweet, socially awkward, or introverted. There are exceptions like the lustful and flirtatious Yamada, or Pansy who has strong charisma and observation skills. Many also have yuri subtext integral to their characters either directly or indirectly. [3]

A unique character is Rin Shima in Laid Back-Camp. She fits with the overall theme of iyashikei, a genre of anime which is “healing,” shying away from romance or action in favor of “meaningful connections with family and friends, and finding joy in the minutiae of life,” as Marley Crusch of Polygon put it. Shima is further described by Crusch as a girl who enjoys camping, quiet, reserved personality, and an introvert, although she becomes better at talking with others by the time of the 2nd season. [4]

This differs from more professional, yet unvoiced, ones in episodes of Akebi’s Sailor Uniform, Kin-iro Mosaic, Revolutionary Girl Utena, Maria Watches Over Us, Is the Order a Rabbit, Kubo Won’t Let Me Be Invisible, and The Dangers in My Heart. Kanina Shizuka in Maria Watches Over Usis another example, but she is a supporting character. This connects to what I wrote in August, noting that within workplaces, there are unspoken/spoken “common standards of professional appearance” which penalize those with “tattoos and piercings, connecting with societally-sanctioned standards of appearance, which can be harsher on women.

In anime, all the characters, with stated or presumed professional credentials, in this post would be called librarians and assistant librarians, according to the landmark Library Act in Japan. In any case, one must continually be critical of what Fobazi Ettarh has defined as vocational awe, a set of values, ideas, and assumptions that “librarians have about themselves and the profession that result in beliefs that libraries…are inherently good…sacred, and…beyond critique.” With that, my post comes to a close. Until next week, where my post will examine the profound lack of libraries in Tom Gauld’s Revenge of the Librarians and stronger fictional depictions.

© 2023-2024 Burkely Hermann. All rights reserved.

Notes

[1] “Literary Club” [Issue 1]; Literary Link, May 6, 2023; “What’s her name?” [Issue 2], Literary Link, May 12, 2023; “Ethically Questionable” [Issue 3], Literary Link, May 27, 2023; “Careful with your face” [Issue 4], Literary Link, Jun. 10, 2023; “Overthinking” [Issue 5], Literary Link, Jun. 24, 2023.

[2] I’m referring to, in part, Nagisa Yasaka in My Roommate is a Cat, Nagisa Yasaka (episode: “Ones Who Can’t Be Controlled” and “What Connects Us”), Aoi Uribe in Myself ; Yourself (episode “The Important Melody”), Hasegawa Sumika in Bernard-jou Iwaku a.k.a. Miss Bernard said, Kamiya in Shikimori’s Not Just a Cutie (episode: “Cultural Festival I”), Sumireko Sanshokunin a.k.a. “Pansy” in Oresuki, Anne and Grea in Manaria Friends,  and Female Student B (librarian) in Azumanga Daioh (episode 19 segment “Springtime of Life”).

[3] “Hisami Hishiishii,” Read or Die Wiki, accessed Jul. 4, 2023; “Hanamaru Kunikida,” Love Live Wiki, accessed Jul. 4, 2023; “Yamada,” B Gata H Kei Wiki, accessed Jul. 4, 2023; “Fumio Murakumi,” Yuri Wiki, accessed Jul. 4, 2023; “Agari Himeko,” Komi-San Wiki, accessed Jul. 4, 2023; “Chiyo Tsukudate,” Strawberry Panic! Wiki, accessed Jul. 4, 2023; “Sumireko Sanshokunin,” Oresuki Wiki, accessed Jul. 4, 2023; “Grea,” Yuri Wiki, accessed Jul. 4, 2023; “Anne (Rage of Bagamut),” Yuri Wiki, accessed Jul. 4, 2023.

[4] “Rin Shima,” Yuru Camp Wiki, accessed Jul. 4, 2023.

#AkebiSSailorUniform #AmityBlight #AoiHana #AzumangaDaioh #beautyStandards #ChiyoTsukudate #disabledPatrons #FobaziEttarh #FruitsBasket #groomingStandards #HanamaruKunikida #HaroldAndKumar #HisamiHishishii #IWantToEatYourPancreas #IsTheOrderARabbit #JapaneseLibrarians #JapanesePatrons #JapaneseWomen #KinIroMosaic #KuboWonTLetMeBeInvisible #LaidBackCamp #LesbianLibrarians #LGBTQ #libraryPatrons #libraryWorkers #LiteraryLink #LoveLiveSunshine #MariaWatchesOverUs #MissBernardSaid #MyNextLifeAsAVillainess #MyRoommateIsACat #MyselfYourself #professionals #RevengeOfTheLibrarians #RevolutionaryGirlUtena #ShikimoriSNotJustACutie #StrawberryPanic #students #SweetBlueFlowers #TheDangersInMyHeart #TheOwlHouse #TheTrumanShow #vocationalAwe #WhisperedWords

A girl confesses to her crush in the library

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