hating on HSBC
Seems someone in my neighborhood feels the way I do about the HSBC ad.

Seems someone in my neighborhood feels the way I do about the HSBC ad.

In this installment of my love/hate relationship with the New York York Public Library: a partnership with FreshDirect a company many New Yorkers claim to be an urban and environmental menace, bike lane usurpers, and union busters.
Did anyone else notice that three of the top ten libraries in the 500,000+ population category and one in the 100,000 in Hennen's American Public Library Ratings 2008 rankings have something in common? That something is zines!
I thought it might be time to lay out a policy about comments, regarding spammers and trolls.
More policies to come, as needed.
This started as a Facebook update, but I thought it would be worth exploring at greater length here, especially as I hope to have a nice bibliography of queer women's fiction by the time I'm through.
This past weekend I attended the Southern Connecticut State University's 18th Annual Women's Studies Conference, participating on a panel with Kate Eichhorn and Kelly Wooten.
Sessions I went to:
Plus I had some random thoughts.
18th Annual Women's Studies Conference at Southern Connecticut State University
18th Annual Women's Studies Conference at Southern Connecticut State University
Zines are self-published, but the motivation behind their publication is different than that driving many vanity press and chapbook authors. The principles of punk rock and riot grrrl community are fundamental to zines, not just as the cultures that birthed them in their current incarnation, but also as what separates them from other self-publications. By collecting and preserving zines, the non-music primary sources of punk rock, librarians are documenting these movements in the participants’ own voices—the voices of those too young, too politically radical, too crusty, and/or too bad mannered to appeal to the corporate media. It is important to note that zine producers are not only people who have been relegated to the margins but also people who have chosen to claim the margins. In contrast to most writers, many zine producers might choose to reject an offer from corporate publishing house. Why let someone else control what you can say, when you can do it yourself? This presentation will address the politics and cultural motivations of zine publication and contrast them with other types of self-publication. Focusing specifically on materials from Barnard College’s open-stack zine collection that uses riot grrrl and other third wave feminist zines to enhance its research-oriented Women’s Studies book collection, this paper will go on to explore why zines belong in established library collections.
I am in the midst of helping to organize two events around the ACRL conference in Seattle in March. They are an ACRL Unconference and a Zine Librarians Conference.
As LISNews reminded me, I am reminding you: Sandy Berman's 75th birthday is on October 6. Please send him some love:
4400 Morningside Rd.
Edina, MN
55416-5043