1. Oxford Academic (OUP) on Tumblr: What do you call a librarian on Tumblr? →

    oupacademic:

    There is nothing, it seems, that the Internet loves so much as … well, cats falling off draining boards, but second to that, it’s abbreviations. As technology and social media expand, and communities continue to grow across the Internet, so language and language use develop and adapt to cater to new situations. From Twitterati to netiquette, a whole raft of new words (often created from existing words) have sprung into being.

    We recentlyasked youwhich word you would use to describe a librarian on Tumblr: offering the optionstumblrian,tumblarian, andtumblrarian.

    image

    Lots of you responded, the clear forerunner being tumblarian. It’s a still a fair way off entering any Oxford dictionary (here’s our inclusion policy) but that obviously doesn’t prohibit us using it out and about on Tumblr.

    And when TheCommonLibrarian reblogged us, adding ‘This is Tumblrilliant!’ (why, thank you very much) she handily gave us another example of the portmanteau word. For that is what Twitteratinetiquette, and tumblarian have in common, and it is a trend which is often seen across social media.

    A ‘portmanteau word’ (or simply ‘portmanteau’) is ‘a word formed by blending sounds from two or more distinct words and combining their meanings’. Which is precisely what you were doing with ‘tumblarian’.

    There are plenty of examples of portmanteaus in everyday use, most of which remain in the ‘slang’ or ‘informal’ categories. Frenemy, for example, (‘friend’ + ‘enemy’), fantabulous (‘fantastic’ + ‘fabulous’), and a word which has recently been added to Oxford Dictionariesflexitarian, from ‘flexible’ and ‘vegetarian’. Some have entered wider, non-slang language use, though, from smog (‘smoke’ and ‘fog’) and vitamin (‘vital’ and ‘amine’) to Oxbridge (Oxford and Cambridge Universities).

    As we said, the Internet loves a good abbreviation. It leaves more time for reblogging GIFs of sneezing pandas, you see. Many Internet-related words we take for granted started life as portmanteaus: blog, an abbreviation of ‘weblog’ (‘web’ + ‘log’), emoticon (‘emotion’ + ‘icon’) and even pixel (‘picture’ + ‘element’). As communities develop, so methods of identification evolve alongside. Those ‘in the know’ can refer, say, to the Twitterati (‘Twitter’ + ‘literati’) or their tweeps (‘Twitter’ + ‘peeps’, for people), in the same way that aficionados of Justin Bieber are Beliebers (‘Bieber’ + ‘believer’) and fans of, ahem, Barry Manilow are Fanilows(you probably don’t need that one explained).

    More and more of these portmanteau words are likely to develop; some will catch on and others will be left behind. Eventually some are likely to joinsmogandOxbridgein theOxford Dictionaries. We can’t promise anything for the future oftumblarian, as far as theOEDis concerned, but we’re glad that we’re a step closer to deciding quite what to call librarians on Tumblr.

    Sometimes, it’s the small decisions which really matter.

    An abridged version of this Oxford Words post.

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    OUP knows how to treat a Tumblr community right.

  2. I was talking about the great submissions OUP has been sending to My Daguerreotype Librarian this weekend while walking by their NY office and broke out into this Naughty By Nature song. “You down with OUP?”

  3. My Daguerreotype Librarian: Mary Eileen Ahern, (1 Oct. 1860-22 May 1938), librarian and... →

    mydaguerreotypelibrarian:

    Mary Eileen Ahern, (1 Oct. 1860-22 May 1938), librarian and editor.  Throughout her life, Ahern devoted much of her enormous energy to organizations. She attended every American Library Association conference from 1893 to 1931, serving on its council and a variety of committees. From January to June 1919 she served as publicity coordinator for the association’s Overseas Library War Service in France. Her articles describing the distribution of books to soldiers in hospitals and camps appeared in such publications as the Chicago Daily News and the Christian Science Monitor. A charter member of the selective American Library Institute, which was founded in 1905, she also served as its secretary for many years. She was elected president of the Illinois State Library Association in 1908, 1909, and 1915.      With Melvil Dewey she organized the Library Department of the National Education Association in 1897 and became the department’s secretary. She repeatedly urged her readers to promote the library movement by participating in library associations. Carl Milam, the longtime executive secretary of the American Library Association, gave her “a very generous share of the credit for the increased size and vigor of American library organizations.”  Read the full biography of her life, made free for Womens History Month, from American National Biography Online.  Image credit: Informal full-length portrait of George Alexander and Mary Ahern holding lawn bowling balls, posing in a ready position at the Lakeside Lawn Bowling field in Chicago, Illinois. DN-0085741, Chicago Daily News negatives collection, Chicago History Museum. Via Library of Congress.

    Mary Eileen Ahern, (1 Oct. 1860-22 May 1938), librarian and editor.

    Throughout her life, Ahern devoted much of her enormous energy to organizations. She attended every American Library Association conference from 1893 to 1931, serving on its council and a variety of committees. From January to June 1919 she served as publicity coordinator for the association’s Overseas Library War Service in France. Her articles describing the distribution of books to soldiers in hospitals and camps appeared in such publications as the Chicago Daily Newsand theChristian Science Monitor. A charter member of the selective American Library Institute, which was founded in 1905, she also served as its secretary for many years. She was elected president of the Illinois State Library Association in 1908, 1909, and 1915.

    WithMelvil Dewey she organized the Library Department of the National Education Association in 1897 and became the department’s secretary. She repeatedly urged her readers to promote the library movement by participating in library associations. Carl Milam, the longtime executive secretary of the American Library Association, gave her “a very generous share of the credit for the increased size and vigor of American library organizations.”

    Read the full biography of her life, made free for Women’s History Month, from American National Biography Online.

    Image credit: Informal full-length portrait of George Alexander and Mary Ahern holding lawn bowling balls, posing in a ready position at the Lakeside Lawn Bowling field in Chicago, Illinois. DN-0085741, Chicago Daily News negatives collection, Chicago History Museum. Via Library of Congress.

    OUP is killing it with these My Daguerreotype Librarian submissions. If you’ve got some radical / awesome / spiritually-intellectually-and-or-visually babely librarians from history that you’d like to share, hit us up!

  4. How we decide Word of the Year [GIFed] →

    oupacademic:

    thelifeguardlibrarian:

    Didn’t realize I’d ever say this, but Oxford University Press Blog FTW!

    Reasons we joined Tumblr… the wonderful tumblrians! (Thank you, thelifeguardlibrarian!)

    I am seriously verklempt.

  5. oupacademic:


Well, hello, we’ve joined Tumblr!
We’ll be sharing content from across our academic publishing here at Oxford University Press. You’ll find our word of the day from dictionaries, quotations and misquotations from literature and life, snippets from our latest publications, podcasts on the lives of notable people and classic literature, some choice bits from the OUPblog, videos from our authors… the list is endless.
We’ll also be delving into the OUP archives to show you all sorts of interesting ephemera from OUP’s long history and give you an insight into life at OUP today.
Follow us on Tumblr, or find us on your other favourite social media, to be part of our community.

Oh OUP, you are my favourite.

    oupacademic:

    Well, hello, we’ve joined Tumblr!

    We’ll be sharing content from across our academic publishing here at Oxford University Press. You’ll find our word of the day from dictionaries, quotations and misquotations from literature and life, snippets from our latest publications, podcasts on the lives of notable people and classic literature, some choice bits from the OUPblog, videos from our authors… the list is endless.

    We’ll also be delving into the OUP archives to show you all sorts of interesting ephemera from OUP’s long history and give you an insight into life at OUP today.

    Follow us on Tumblr, or find us on your other favourite social media, to be part of our community.

    Oh OUP, you are my favourite.

  6. One of the most closely watched e-reserve cases in recent memory came to an end—though an appeal is still possible—on May 11, when Judge Orinda Evans of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia ruled in Cambridge University Press (CUP); Oxford University Press (OUP); Sage Publications v. Georgia State University (GSU). The case alleged copyright infringement in GSU’s e-reserves, and in essence the judge came down on the side of libraries in a 350-page decision delivered almost a year after she heard closing arguments.

    Of the 75 cases of alleged infringement she considered, Judge Evans held five to be infringement. The rest were either held to be fair use, or the question did not arise, because the copying was held to be de minimis—when virtually no one actually read the posted work—or because the publishers did not demonstrate to the court’s satisfaction that they had standing to make the claim.

    — From LJ, Meredith Schwartz’s recent story on copyright, e-reserves, and the recent Georgia State case.