Friday, October 23, 2009

My LIS professor is actually a Ninja Bus Hijacker

AAAAHHHHH!!!!

Library school, you drive me craaaaazzzzy!!!!!

Now that we got that out of the way.

Last week was crazy. Monday, I had work but no class because of Fast Track weekend, which let me tell you is ridiculous. There was a lot of drinking that weekend. Not going to lie.
Anyway, before I talk about Library related things, let's talk about how Wednesday was the weirdest, most ridiculous day ever.

Things I have learned this week, just because of Wednesday:

1. Scranton is creepy. I can't explain it.
2. PA is full of movie shoots. There was one near my fellow librarian's house, which is like a few blocks from me, when she came to get me. I think it had Jake Gyllenhaal in it. I don't know anything other than that. Also, there was a film shoot in Altoona, somewhere or maybe it was before Altoona. I don't really know. It was in nowheresville, PA. It's for a movie called Unstoppable, about an unstoppable train. With Denzel Washington and some other random people I can't remember... oh yeah, that guy from the new Star Trek. One of those dudes. We got stuck in a traffic jam on the way home when they were filming the train in the sunset with helicopters and everything.
3. Panera is delicious after a ten hour car drive. Especially an epically disappointing ten hour car drive.
4. Ice cream is also good.

Seriously though, this is a funny story. We drive all the way to Scranton. We were like 20 minutes out of town and ticketmaster calls my friend and tells her the concert we were going to see was canceled. which is the point in which we wish we had gotten the call before we left Pittsburgh. We drove all the way to Scranton just to see the place where the concert would be, just out of curiosity. Downtown Scranton is just odd. There are so many temple looking buildings and banners hanging over the street.

As disappointed as we were, the whole thing was kind of hilarious. So we spent the rest of the ride home speculating about ninja tour bus hijacking and somehow, our LIS 2000 professor being involved. It also involved the movie shoot and a Chemotherapeutic Infectious Waste truck, which we spent part of our drive behind. That is how hilariously awful our Wednesday turned out. You are all mad jealous of that, I can tell. It's totes cool though. I have to resist recounting all of the other times I have traveled shows only to get there and have them be postponed/ canceled. It's OK though because my friend and I are determined to see them again. We are already making plans. That's how ridiculous we are. xD

Sorry for the off-topicness but that was just too interesting not to share.

So libraries. How about them. I'm working on a repository review right now for my Archives and Records Management Class, which goes to show you how popular and exciting I am. Some days, I feel like I fit in so well with my fellow Librarian and Archivists and other days, I feel like everyone hates me and thinks I'm totally weird or they are just pretending to like me. I feel like that most of the time though, even with people I should totally know better than to think that with, it's just the way I am.

Anyway, Repository Reviews. I am doing mine on the Center For American Music, which is a repository at the University of Pittsburgh for American 19th, 20th and 21st century music. It's really cool and I enjoy writing about it, for the most part. I'm kind in doubt about the program, mostly because I feel like it's way too academic. It's emphasizes publishing in academic journals and things like that, which I am not interested in. I love the practical and hands on aspect of Archiving but the academic side, I could most definitely do without. I'm thinking maybe I might want to be a conservator or switch to general librarianship but that's not quite right either because I do like the organizing and cataloging aspect of Archiving.

I just always have to find something wrong with things I like because I can never be happy with the way things are. It's seriously getting old.

Anyway, sorry about my whining. I'm hopefully going to have an appointment with my adviser next week about these issues and I will let you all know how that goes. I know you are all excited about that. xD

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Librarians supporting random things

Moment when you know you're among people as nerdy as you: When you are in your library and archival preservation class and your teacher is telling you about a historical society that left out ancient documents without a case of some sort to protect it and the whole class groans in frustration. At the same time. We were collectively imaging all of the people that breathed on it.

There are moments when I freaking love library school. Seriously. I mean I generally dig it but there are times when I honestly just feel like less of a collesal nerd. My friend and I wore our "Librarians for AFI" shirts that we made to the concert on Sunday and people kept stopping to ask if we were really librarians and were really surprised to find out that we actually were. We got compliments and it was awesome. I think we should make "Librarians for" shirts for other things like birds with top hats. I bet I could pay off grad school doing that.

Went for drinks after class today and commiserated about life. It was good. Rode the bus home slightly tipsy but it was cool.
Tomorrow: work and studying for the mid-term. Sleep time now.

Thursday, October 08, 2009

Class Thoughts and Spring Registration, Holy Crap!

OMG. Spring Registration. Holy Shit. So I've made it almost to the second semester of my program.
I have a mid-term next week. I don't understand how they can test us on the stuff they taught us in class. The class is taking things that should be intuitive and trying to turn them into academic topics and the profession is already inherently academic. I honestly don't understand the point of that class. My other three classes all relate to each other in one way or another. You can connect the material from one class to what we're learning in another one. One class is about the process of organizing material and what exactly being an archivist or records manager means. Another class is about technology and how computer networks work, which we'll probably need if we ever have to build a database for an organization and their collection. Another class is about the physical preservation of materials, like what temperature they need to be kept at and what you need to do to keep bugs out.
I understand all of these but... Understanding Information...? That's intuitive. There's no teaching that, at least this kind of information. You understand something through reading and examining it, not whatever it is we're doing. This is an academic profession by it's very nature. You don't have to make everything technical. I don't understand what they are trying to teach us to begin with, I mean... it's just... doesn't make any sense.
I'm not explaining this really well. You'd just have to sit through a class or something. I mean, for example, we had to read an article about aboutness one week. I feel like I'm in a philosophy class. I have other classes where that comes in a little, like talking about what a record can be, which was a really good discussion and very interesting for an early Tuesday morning but... seriously? What are you trying to teach us? What is the aim of this class? Can you explain that to me somehow? Thanks.
Anyway,
In other news, my classes are already picked out for next semester. The joys of being in graduate school. No decisions to make. I'm hoping to audit History of the Book but I have a feeling I won't be allowed.
I have to talk to my adviser and straighten out my thoughts and whatnot.
It is now my mission in life to learn the relative humidity and temperature used to preserve musical instruments. I've learned this for audio recordings, film, photographs, and paper. I think I will ask in class next week. I am curious.
Research opportunity?
I think so.

Friday, October 02, 2009

Week 5: Papers, Music, Indecision

Interesting week. Classes were good. I learned about preservation methods of non paper media like records and CD's. I have come to the conclusion that things like records and books from earlier than the 1800's actually last longer than things from recent years. It's crazy. I made a corrugated clamshell for a book the other day from 1669. It was so cool. Books from as recently as 1990's are in our preservation department for repair and things like that last like a mofo.
Library school can be a big bowl of ridiculous sometimes, such as one of the classes I'm in right now. I swear, it's a catch all for the department. If you wanted to teach a book in your class and you didn't have the time, you throw it in this class. I don't really understand how it's useful in anyway. I just submitted a paper for it and I'm hoping for the best. I honestly don't know what to expect.

Anyway, today I went to the Music Library to get some books for a project I'm doing for Library and Archival Preservation, which is so far my favorite and most useful class as far as content. It's the least abstract too. The music library is so cool. I really want to do something with music archiving but I'm not sure exactly what. I'm hoping that I can get involved with something like that after I graduate. Anyway, I found some really cool books, not just on my topic but on other cool things like Patti Smith and Riot Grrl. There are entire books just on synthesizers and I saw one on the history of the double bass that I want to check out when I have more time. As much as I love libraries, I'm kind of discovering that there are way too many things I want to do. I honestly wanted to switch to something with music when I walked into the music building and heard people talking about scales and practicing the piano. I wish had time to do that. I miss playing piano. It's been years since I've done that and months since I've played guitar. I had to leave my guitar at home when I moved because there was only room for my ukulele. I've been trying to keep up with it since ukulele and guitar have a lot of similarities.

There are so many things I want to do: work in/for a museum, do archeology work, music archiving, work in a library. I really feel slightly lost. I've thought about switching to the independent librarian track, instead of Archives. The deadline for that is coming up soon. I'm a little tempted, honestly. I want to repair books which is what I'm learning at the Archives Preservation Center but I've kind of decided that I want to do something hands on like that. I really love working there and I like doing tangible things I can see, rather than organizing databases. I don't know. Either way, the archives classes are really interesting.

We had a badass discussion the other week in my Archives and Records Management class about what exactly is knowledge, data, information and records. There are such fine distinctions from what you originally think. It was such a cool discussion, even for 9:00 in the morning.
Anyway, hopefully more updates soon. I hope I'm not too boring. I feel like it sometimes.
Thanks for reading. <3