Essays On Air: Why libraries can and must change - a podcast by The Conversation

from 2018-01-25T19:12:33

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The much heralded 'death of the book' has nothing to do with the death of reading or writing. It is about a radical transformation in reading practices. Marcella Cheng/NY-CC-BD, CC BY-NC-ND

In the age of the globalisation of everything – and the privatisation of everything else - libraries can and must change. In fact, it’s already underway, as new technologies take books and libraries to places that are, as yet, unimaginable.



That’s what we’re unpacking today on Essays On Air, where we bring you fascinating long form essays in audio form.



Today, Camilla Nelson, Associate Professor of Writing at the University of Notre Dame, reads her essay, titled Why libraries can and must change.



Nelson takes us from the ancient Library of Alexandria to the New York Public Library and explores the problems that arise when books are excluded, destroyed, censored and forgotten. And, indeed, when libraries are decimated.



Join us as we read to you here at Essays On Air, a podcast from The Conversation.



Find us and subscribe in Apple Podcasts, in Pocket Casts or wherever you get your podcasts.



Additional audio



Snow by David Szesztay



Big chain by daveincamas



Traffic noise in the street by jcgd2



Automatic door by Kyodon



Kids Birthday Party Crowd by jakobthiesen



Cardboard burning by Rare Mess Recordings



Plunger-pop by Quistard



environment 1st floor by mariiao2



Moderate waves on the edge of a river by Duophonic



breaking objects by deleted_user_3667256



Vacuum cleaner, by InspectorJ



Morning docks by nathanaellentz



Tearing paper by ScreamStudio



Shhh Sounds by AryaNotStark



Best Bernard Black Moments, Black Books by Channel 4



Ye Olde Green Inn by MAT64



Robo Hobo by The Freeharmonic Orchestra



This episode was edited by Jenni Henderson. Illustration by Marcella Cheng.

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