UofL Libraries joins The Internet Archive
Posted: September 11, 2012 Filed under: Books, Collections, Ekstrom Library, Photographs | Tags: Fine Whisky Facts, George C. Buchanan, Internet Archive, Libraries, Louisville Kentucky, University of Louisville, UofL Libraries Leave a comment »“Libraries exist to preserve society’s cultural artifacts and to provide access to them. If libraries are to continue to foster education and scholarship in this era of digital technology, it’s essential for them to extend those functions into the digital world.” – The Internet Archive
Earlier this year, the University of Louisville Libraries began digitizing and adding texts to our very own corner of The Internet Archive, a nonprofit internet library which provides free, permanent access to digital collections from all over the world. Several of the items we’ve added so far are souvenir booklets containing some wonderful photographs of the city of Louisville from the early 20th century.
Other items include biographies and histories of industries in Kentucky, including one of our most downloaded items to date, Fine Whisky Facts compiled by George C. Buchanan.
The books UofL Libraries have uploaded to The Internet Archive can be viewed in several formats including online, on a Kindle e-reader device, downloaded as a PDF file, etc. UofL’s contributions were scanned and assigned metadata by Sarah Frankel and MARC cataloging records were created by Tyler Goldberg.
Ray Bradbury and Edgar Rice Burroughs
Posted: June 15, 2012 Filed under: Books, Collections, Ekstrom Library, Literature | Tags: Edgar Rice Burroughs, Libraries, Library of America, New Yorker, Ray Bradbury, Special Collections 1 Comment »At the time of Ray Bradbury’s death last week, I had just read something by him for the first time in decades: his short reflection called “Take Me Home” in the Sci Fi-themed special double issue of The New Yorker (88(16): 66, June 4-11, 2012).
Reading his nostalgic piece invoked my own fond memories of the enthusiastic Junior High English teacher who first introduced me to Bradbury’s work. It also, along with the spate of obituaries and tributes that followed that last published work, highlighted some connections between Bradbury’s influences and my current profession.
Ray Bradbury championed libraries, to which he attributes his education as a writer. His “How Instead of Being Educated in College, I Was Graduated from Libraries or, Thoughts from a Chap Who Landed on the Moon in 1932″ (Wilson Library Bulletin 45(9): 842-851, May 1971) is stored in UofL Libraries’ Robotic Retrieval System.
In addition to the role libraries played in his formation as a writer, Bradbury was influenced by Edgar Rice Burroughs. So was my colleague George McWhorter, who established the Nell Dismukes McWhorter Memorial Collection of Edgar Rice Burroughs, the largest institutional collection of Burroughs materials in the world, in the Special Collections department at UofL’s Ekstrom Library. McWhorter confirms that the collection includes letters from Bradbury.
Bradbury is not the only writer to acknowledge his debt to Burroughs. The Library of America has published two Burroughs titles, with introductions by Junot Díaz and Thomas Mallon; Michael Chabon contributed to the screenplay for the recent film John Carter, based on a story by Burroughs. The U.S. Postal Service is celebrating the centennial of Burroughs’ publications by issuing a Forever stamp of him later this summer.
Meet Your Reference Librarian: Anna Marie Johnson
Posted: January 19, 2012 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Libraries, People, reference 1 Comment »
- Formal Title: Head, Reference and Information Literacy Dept. and Associate Professor
- Department: Reference
- Specialty: Humanities subjects, EndNote, and I’ll pretty much take a crack at any other subjects
- Years with the Ekstrom Library: 16
- What’s the coolest thing about working in the library: working with really smart people.
- Interesting reference question: Pretty much any question—hunting for the information is what I enjoy the most.
- Book I’m currently reading: Reading Wide Awake by Patrick Shannon; Clash of Kings by George R. R. Martin
- Favorite Web 2.0 Tool: LibGuides (professional—it has made creation of help guides so much easier!) and Flickr (personal—I could spend hours!)
- What’s needed in the 21st Century Classroom: Time to think and reflect away from clicking.
- Dream profession (other than librarian): Storyteller or owner of a small café/used book store; teaching small children to swim.
- Interesting fact: My family has three chickens.
- Contact information:
Email: annamarie@louisville.edu
Phone: (502) 852-1491

