“The librarian of today, and it will be true still
more of the librarians of tomorrow, are not fiery dragons interposed between
the people and the books. They are useful public servants, who manage libraries
in the interest of the public... Many still think that a great reader, or a
writer of books, will make an excellent librarian. This is pure fallacy.” — Sir William
Osler, 1917
Thirty years ago this October I entered
the library profession. Over the course of those thirty years I have held five
positions, four of them in an academic setting: instruction/reference
librarian, library director, medical librarian, director of archives, and
curator of special collections and rare books. The path I mapped out for myself
at the beginning of my career was altered a bit along the way. But for the most
part I ended up where I hoped I would end up: in a large academic research
library. My initial career map thirty years ago did not get down to specific
job titles or duties so it is still a bit of a surprise to me (and maybe to
others as well) that I ended up where I am, in the world of archives and
special collections as a curator of special collections and rare books. The
question I’m facing at the moment is: will I stay here?
I don’t think it is an inappropriate
question to ask, although some of my colleagues and friends might be surprised
that I’m asking it. After all, they would point out, I just stepped into an
endowed curatorship two years ago, and for an amazing collection (the world’s
largest gathering of material related to Sherlock Holmes). My job is secure; I
have the equivalent of academic tenure. Life is good. Or is it?
I won’t answer that last question (or
the one before it) at present. Instead I would like to “set the table” as it
were for what I believe may end up being an extended series of personal reflections
on the library profession. The time for such a reflection is perfect (for me if
for no one else): by my reckoning I am about two-thirds of the way through my
career; I have worked for thirty years and anticipate retiring after another
fourteen to sixteen years of labor. Some might wish me to retire earlier and I
would do so were it to my economic advantage. But at the present no such
advantage exists. My economic liabilities are modest in number if not in size
and the current health care and insurance systems offer no incentives for me to
think about leaving the workforce any time soon.
Economic considerations were never at
the heart of my decision to enter the profession. We told ourselves that we
were entering the profession not to get rich but to provide for the public
good. It was, in some ways, a lamentable fairy-tale. So let me make this my
first observation on my chosen career as I begin these series of reflections: I
was rarely paid what I was worth. And at some times I was barely paid a living
wage. It was true at the beginning; it continues to be true today. A very
famous research library, in one of my first interviews for a professional
position, dangled a very low salary in front of my eyes with two self-justifications:
1) having the name of their library on my résumé would, in the future, open
doors and translate into imminently higher salaries in later positions; 2) the
low salary was compensated for, in some ways, by the lower rents charged to
library employees who lived in library-owned apartments (should I choose to
live in such an apartment, were I hired). I ended up being the runner-up for
the position I had applied for and in some respects I was lucky; a short time
later an impoverished and struggling school hired me—and paid me more than the
world-renowned library would have. But I still wonder if the name of the
library on my vita would have really translated into something down the road. I’ll
never know the answer to that question. But I think I have a hint.
1 comment:
I really enjoyed reading this, Tim - I'm very glad that you're doing a series on your experiences in the library world. I am looking forward to your future posts!
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