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1. Verfasser: MacWilliams, Bryon
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Sprache:en
Veröffentlicht: 2009
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ855271
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author MacWilliams, Bryon
author_facet MacWilliams, Bryon
MacWilliams, Bryon
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents A Gift for Reading Hall No. 1 MacWilliams, Bryon Government Libraries Foreign Countries Library Administration Library Policy Library Services Phenomenology In this article, the author describes Reading Hall No. 1 of the Russian State Library. He was placed in the first reading hall in the mid-1990s, when the Russian government still honored Soviet traditions of granting certain privileges to certain foreigners. In the first hall, the rules are different. He can request as many books as he wants. He can keep books without renewing them for five days, not three. He can hold them for two months, not two weeks. He can also use a laptop for long periods; it is the only hall with electrical outlets. Most importantly, though--for a guy without a girlfriend, kids, or even a roommate--the reading hall is a place where he can labor at a solitary task, among people. Usually the people at the reading tables are much older men, in down-at-the-heel shoes and threadbare suits, who, one librarian told him, have been coming to the library for 50 years. The author also tells about the plants he donated because he was leaving the country soon and wanted to give something back, something living.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ855271
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2009
record_format eric
spellingShingle A Gift for Reading Hall No. 1
MacWilliams, Bryon
Government Libraries
Foreign Countries
Library Administration
Library Policy
Library Services
Phenomenology
A Gift for Reading Hall No. 1 MacWilliams, Bryon Government Libraries Foreign Countries Library Administration Library Policy Library Services Phenomenology In this article, the author describes Reading Hall No. 1 of the Russian State Library. He was placed in the first reading hall in the mid-1990s, when the Russian government still honored Soviet traditions of granting certain privileges to certain foreigners. In the first hall, the rules are different. He can request as many books as he wants. He can keep books without renewing them for five days, not three. He can hold them for two months, not two weeks. He can also use a laptop for long periods; it is the only hall with electrical outlets. Most importantly, though--for a guy without a girlfriend, kids, or even a roommate--the reading hall is a place where he can labor at a solitary task, among people. Usually the people at the reading tables are much older men, in down-at-the-heel shoes and threadbare suits, who, one librarian told him, have been coming to the library for 50 years. The author also tells about the plants he donated because he was leaving the country soon and wanted to give something back, something living.
title A Gift for Reading Hall No. 1
topic Government Libraries
Foreign Countries
Library Administration
Library Policy
Library Services
Phenomenology
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ855271