December 13, 2024

Civics

Rebel against The Algorithm. Get a library card.

Lisa Prolman, Assistant Library Director, Greenfield Public Library Photo by Matthew Cavanaugh

Lisa Prolman, Assistant Library Director, Greenfield Public Library Photo by Matthew Cavanaugh

Lisa Prolman, Assistant Library Director, Greenfield Public Library Photo by Matthew Cavanaugh

"I reach for my phone and type:

"Who painted that corner diner at night with those lonely looking people sitting inside? 

"But what if it hadn’t been so simple? What if—instead of having my screen cluttered instantly with infinite reproductions of Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks—I was forced to live in a period of contemplation? Of not knowing? Might that have generated a spark of curiosity?

"If so, I might have found my way to the library. And while there, I might have stumbled on a good deal more about Nighthawks and its enigmatic portrayal of urban loneliness—as, once upon a time, as a Midwestern kid longing for a life in the big city, I did within the stacks at the Iowa City Public Library. There, I followed the streets of Hopper’s metropolis to the stories of John Cheever and Ralph Ellison, their characters often under the spell of Duke Ellington and Dizzy Gillespie, whose records I checked out. I could step backward, too, following Hopper’s urban themes to Degas and Manet—their gamines encountered with the longing felt in the pages of Proust.

"Or I could fast forward through time, following the throughline of Hopper’s influence on another painter, George Tooker, who focused a paranoid gaze on waiting rooms and subway platforms to paint a bureaucratized modern dystopia. From there, it was a short trip to Zamyatin’s We or Orwell’s 1984. In the library, with its faint arboreal scent of binding glue, I was able to have my first encounters with a life beyond the prairies.

'When I Google Nighthawks now, the Image Search feature of Google brings me first to advertisements for Amazon-peddled reproductions of the painting—some of them washed out and pale, others featuring the cast of Star Wars in place of Hopper’s anonymous figures—all of them available for about $11.95." - Charles Digges

ARTICLE: Viva la Library!

Libraries

Civics

"We have huge power, we of the affluent societies, we who are causing the most environmental damage."

ARTICLE: The Power of One

Civics

Creating stories about what might happen in order to shape and change the future, not simply to predict or adapt to it

VIDEO: Transforming the Future with Adam Kahane

Civics

Empowering communities through reliable and impactful information

WEBSITE: The Listening Post Collective

Civics

Striking parallels link witch-hunt falsehoods to today’s online misinformation.

ARTICLE: From Printing Presses to Facebook Feeds: What Yesterday’s Witch Hunts Have in Common with Today’s Misinformation Crisis