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Hauptverfasser: Dilevko, Juris, Gottlieb, Lisa
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Sprache:en
Veröffentlicht: 2004
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ875892
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author Dilevko, Juris
Gottlieb, Lisa
author_facet Dilevko, Juris
Gottlieb, Lisa
Dilevko, Juris
Gottlieb, Lisa
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The Portrayal of Librarians in Obituaries at the End of the Twentieth Century Dilevko, Juris Gottlieb, Lisa Social Networks Librarians Death Newspapers Public Opinion Social Attitudes Profiles Mass Media Effects Role Obituaries can reveal much about the way a profession is conceived and structured in the popular imagination. This article examines obituaries of librarians in the "New York Times" between 1977 and 2002 to determine how librarians were presented to the general public by a major newspaper. Although librarianship is a female-intensive profession, 63.4 percent of the obituaries chronicled the lives of male librarians. Although public and school librarians outnumber their academic counterparts, obituaries focused on academic librarians. Far from creating a stereotypical portrait of librarians as shy, dour, dowdy, and sheltered individuals, the emphasis on large-scale achievements in the obituaries produces an image of librarianship as a glamorous profession. Some librarians are presented as sleuths and detectives who amassed large collections. They contributed to the progress of scholarly research with extensive publications. Many others had connections to prominent people, making the most of these social networks in their work. Librarians were also players on the global stage, founding libraries abroad and developing international guidelines that led to institutional progress. Emphasis on large-scale accomplishment, however, tends to obscure the contributions of librarians who daily perform countless small and caring acts that, summed together, positively affect the lives of ordinary individuals.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ875892
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2004
record_format eric
spellingShingle The Portrayal of Librarians in Obituaries at the End of the Twentieth Century
Dilevko, Juris
Gottlieb, Lisa
Social Networks
Librarians
Death
Newspapers
Public Opinion
Social Attitudes
Profiles
Mass Media Effects
Role
The Portrayal of Librarians in Obituaries at the End of the Twentieth Century Dilevko, Juris Gottlieb, Lisa Social Networks Librarians Death Newspapers Public Opinion Social Attitudes Profiles Mass Media Effects Role Obituaries can reveal much about the way a profession is conceived and structured in the popular imagination. This article examines obituaries of librarians in the "New York Times" between 1977 and 2002 to determine how librarians were presented to the general public by a major newspaper. Although librarianship is a female-intensive profession, 63.4 percent of the obituaries chronicled the lives of male librarians. Although public and school librarians outnumber their academic counterparts, obituaries focused on academic librarians. Far from creating a stereotypical portrait of librarians as shy, dour, dowdy, and sheltered individuals, the emphasis on large-scale achievements in the obituaries produces an image of librarianship as a glamorous profession. Some librarians are presented as sleuths and detectives who amassed large collections. They contributed to the progress of scholarly research with extensive publications. Many others had connections to prominent people, making the most of these social networks in their work. Librarians were also players on the global stage, founding libraries abroad and developing international guidelines that led to institutional progress. Emphasis on large-scale accomplishment, however, tends to obscure the contributions of librarians who daily perform countless small and caring acts that, summed together, positively affect the lives of ordinary individuals.
title The Portrayal of Librarians in Obituaries at the End of the Twentieth Century
topic Social Networks
Librarians
Death
Newspapers
Public Opinion
Social Attitudes
Profiles
Mass Media Effects
Role
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ875892