Jessamyn West (librarian)
Jessamyn West | |||
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File:Jessamyn West, librarian (2012).jpg
Jessamyn West: The Librarian at Home
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Born | September 5, 1968 | ||
Residence | Vermont | ||
Nationality | American | ||
Occupation | Librarian, blogger | ||
Known for | librarian.net | ||
Website | jessamyn.info | ||
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Jessamyn Charity West (born September 5, 1968) is an American librarian and blogger, best known as the creator of librarian.net and for her unconventional views on her profession. She is a former member of the American Library Association Council, and was a moderator on MetaFilter.
Early life and career
West grew up in Massachusetts,[1] where her father, computer engineer Tom West, worked for RCA and Data General. (He was the key figure in the 1981 Tracy Kidder book The Soul of a New Machine.) She may be named after the author Jessamyn West (according to her parents, a "coincidence"),[2] and as a child corresponded with her.[1] She is also the niece of actor Peter Coyote.[3]
She graduated from Hampshire College in Amherst[2] and moved to Seattle in 1990.[1] In 1995, she went to Cluj-Napoca in Romania, where she ran a library for the Freedom Forum.[2] After returning to the U.S. she completed graduate work at the University of Washington for a Master of Librarianship degree.[1]
She has lived in Vermont since 2003.[2] She works as a freelance library consultant, mainly in Orange County, Vermont, focusing on helping libraries with technology.[2] She was a paid employee and moderator for the group blog MetaFilter, and answers as many as two questions a day on the question-and-answer subforum Ask MetaFilter.[4] She is also an active Wikipedian, working particularly on Vermont and library topics.[5] In June 2011 she joined the Wikimedia Foundation Advisory Board.[6][7] She has staffed information desks at Burning Man and the 1999 WTO protests, and served as a judge for ThinkQuest.[8]
West briefly signed up as a researcher for Google Answers, writing about her experience for the journal Searcher.[9] (She resigned after finding she had probably violated her contract by writing about the service.)[10] West believed that "the money factor" skewed the relationship between the researcher and consumer of information, and played a part in the service's later demise.[11]
West is considered an "opinion maker" in the profession and presents frequently at conferences.[12] In 2002, Library Journal named her a "mover and shaker" of the library world.[8] She is a self-described anti-capitalist.
Librarian.net
Web address | http://www.librarian.net |
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Slogan | putting the rarin' back in librarian since 1999 |
Type of site
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blog |
Available in | English |
Owner | Jessamyn West |
Created by | Jessamyn West |
Launched | 1999 |
Current status | active |
Librarian.net, which she founded in 1999 after finding the domain name unused, has become a "widely read and cited" resource.[12]
West characterizes librarian.net as generally "anti-censorship, pro-freedom of speech, pro-porn (for lack of a better way to explain that we don't find the naked body shameful), anti-globalization, anti-outsourcing, anti-Dr. Laura, pro-freak, pro-social responsibility, and just generally pro-information and in favor of the profession getting a better image."
Wired described her as "on the front lines in battling the USA PATRIOT Act," particularly the provisions that allow warrantless searches of library records. The act not only prohibits libraries from notifying the subjects of such searches, it prohibits them from disclosing to the public whether any such searches have been made. In protest, West created a number of notices that libraries can post which she suggests are "technically legal." One of them, for example, reads: "The FBI has not been here. Watch very closely for the removal of this sign." The Vermont Library Association provided copies of this sign to every public library in Vermont.[13]
West was one of about three dozen "credentialed bloggers" at the 2004 Democratic National Convention,[14] the first time that such an event issued press credentials to bloggers. She indicated in a New York Times feature on the group that her goal was making "the librarian voice in politics stronger and louder."[15] Her first-day quip that the convention was "Burning Man for Democrats, without the nudity or drugs" was widely reported.[16]
In 2007, West made a YouTube video of herself installing Ubuntu on two library computers, which attracted thousands of views and requests for free CDs from Canonical.[17] DesktopLinux.com called it a "non-jaded, non-techie look at Ubuntu."[18] Cory Doctorow, writing on the blog Boing Boing, dubbed her an "internet folk hero", and brought the video 14,000 views in a day and a half.[19]
Published works
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- Anthologies
- Jessamyn West (ed) (2004) Digital Versus Non-Digital Reference: Ask a Librarian Online and Offline, Haworth Information Press; ISBN 0-7890-2442-X
- Roberto, K.R. and Jessamyn West (eds) (2003): Revolting Librarians Redux: Radical Librarians Speak Out, McFarland & Company; ISBN 0-7864-1608-4
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- The book is a follow-up to the 1972 Revolting Librarians (ISBN 0912932015), and includes new essays by ten of the contributors to the original.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ 12.0 12.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ [dead link]/(subscription required)Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
External links
- jessamyn.com – personal site
- librarian.net – professional site
- "A Librarian Blogger at the DNC", West's article on her experience covering the 2004 Democratic National Convention
- Entry at Library of Congress Authorities
- Articles with dead external links from May 2015
- Pages containing links to subscription-only content
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with empty listen template
- Articles with hCards
- 1968 births
- American activists
- American bloggers
- American librarians
- American Library Association people
- Hampshire College alumni
- Living people
- People from Bethel, Vermont
- People from Massachusetts
- People from Seattle, Washington
- University of Washington alumni
- Wikimedia Foundation Advisory Board members
- Privacy activists