A hive of
intellectual curiosity and pursuit. That was my impression as I looked up from
the new Alexander McCall Smith novel I was sampling in the New Books section of
our public library. Before me, spread throughout the spacious, well-appointed
library were patrons of all ages, even college students in spite of the fact
that the university nearby has several extensive libraries as well. The public
library is a citizens’ space: common ground for the common good. Ours is heavily
patronized by readers young and old across the economic strata. Yes, a number
of homeless individuals take shelter there, reading the day away or using the
pubic computers, avoiding the bitter chill of the Indiana winter. Why should
they not? They are as entitled to the pursuit of knowledge or the pleasure of a
good read as anyone.
Although the
Digital Revolution has brought about changes in how we can engage in literate
pursuits, those changes—the Internet, ebooks—have provided new options, rather
than substitutes for volumes on shelves. I will gladly confess that in the
course of writing five or six books since 2000, I have not darkened the door of
traditional library to do the research necessary for them. The Internet has
provided me with access to libraries, collections, and various media worldwide.
But that does not mean that I consider traditional libraries obsolete. Far
from it. Public libraries offer both traditional resources and access to
digital resources, especially for those who don’t have computer media ready to
hand. The emerging Digital Age is enlarging the role of public libraries, not
reducing it.
That is not what
those heavily invested in the Industrial/Corporate Age would have us believe.
Corporate oligarchs are grasping at every possible means to extend the
Corporate Age past its sell-by date, which was about the turn of the century.
Much of this grasping is taking the form of attacking common ground: public
places, spaces, and endeavors whose democratic mission is to foster and support
the common good. The graspers are largely conservative, though not exclusively,
and focused on elitist privilege, often corporate. The Digital Age is
increasingly about individuation and diverse community, not about corporate
personhood.
Public libraries,
public schools, public—read “democratic”—anything is suspect in the eyes of
corporate oligarchy, in which monied elites are focused on controlled
parochialism. Gerrymandering electoral districts to ensure that candidates
backed by corporate money win offices and become puppet legislators;
undermining public confidence in public schools by unfounded criticism,
underfunding, and the shunting of public money into corporate pockets through
contracts for ever more testing, vouchers, and charter schools; widening the
wealth gap between rich and poor through regressive taxes and tax breaks for
corporations and the wealthy—all of these are the self-serving actions of those
heavily invested in a dying age, the Industrial/Corporate Age.
The Digital Age,
sparked by two key Digital Revolution developments, the computer and the
Internet, is not an extension of the Industrial/Corporate Age. It is a
revolution-worthy new era. Too many people already understand this. Maybe they
read newspapers or see the information on Facebook. Maybe they come to the
public library. However, they gain their understanding of the radical changes that are
marking out a new cultural era, it’s scaring the bejezus out of conservatives
hoping to preserve the dying Industrial/Corporate age. But beware. Those who
are afraid are always dangerous. Those of us ready to embrace the Digital Age
would do well to remember Gandhi’s words: “The enemy is fear. We think it is
hate; but, it is fear.”
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