Of course, any person's private collection of books is sometimes referred to as their "library." But we more often employ that word for a large, shared collection of books, particularly one in a building dedicated to that purpose. Following that meaning of the word, we can identify libraries even in the ancient world. Such as the fabled Library of Alexandria, which existed in Egypt from the 3rd century B.C.E through most of the 4th century C.E. But that research library existed for only an intellectual elite who could read, and they could not take its scrolls home.
Library building in Peterborough, New Hampshire built in 1893 |
With the rapid rise of the Internet, many have predicted the demise of libraries. With people now being able to read and download electronic books to their computers at home, what use is there for physical library-buildings with all those antiquated hard-copy books -- or so it has been asked.
Anyone who has recently visited libraries in a large city, however, may have observed how libraries have changed with the Internet, finding new ways to serve people. I have seen librarians coach people, many of whom do not have Internet connections at home, in how to research on the computers set up in libraries. Invisible wifi signals now fill the air along with the faint scent of paper books. (One library I have been in even boasts that its wifi signal can, for convenience, be picked up in the parking lot.) And the 2008 recession increased library use as people who had lost jobs or homes relied upon libraries for job-research or for an air-conditioned respite from the weather.
Traveling burro-library in Colombia |
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In what tangible or intangible ways have you benefited from libraries?
(The photo of the burro-library is by Acción Visual/Diana Arias,
and is used under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.)
2 comments:
I got a kick out of your photo of the boy getting a book from the saddlebag on the burro. That boy reminded me of when I was a child being taken to the library by my parents. I loved going to the library!
I think libraries are magical! I pay a couple of dollars a year out of my taxes and in return, I can walk into a giant building full of books (in itself a marvel!), choose one or ten, and keep them for weeks at a time. I can even ask for books in another county or state.
Tremendous!
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