Librarians in popular culture

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This is a collection of descriptions of librarians in popular culture, i.e., literature, film, television, and games.

Contents

[edit] Literature

  • Neal Stephenson's novel, Snow Crash features both the "Central Information Congress" (a commercialized melding of the Central Intelligence Agency and the Library of Congress) and a virtual librarian which assists the main character, Hiro Protagonist.[1]
  • In the Discworld book series by Terry Pratchett there is a librarian who has been magically turned into an orangutan. In these stories, librarians frequently have supernatural powers related to books and library work, including access to a form of hyperspace known as L-Space.[2]
  • In the comic book series Batman, Barbara Gordon is a computer-savvy librarian using the name Oracle. Before she was shot by the Joker, restricting the use of her legs, she was known as Batgirl.
  • Lucien, from Neil Gaiman's comic book series The Sandman, tends to The Dreaming's library, where all the books that are dreamt of, but never written, are contained.
  • Jack and Annie in The Magic Treehouse series of children's books become "Master Librarians".
  • Irma Pince is the librarian in several of the Harry Potter novels. She is a minor character as a disciplinarian in the Hogwarts library.
  • Malachi is the scholarly librarian in Umberto Eco's medieval murder mystery The Name of the Rose who unlocks the secrets of a labyrinthine library to the novel's protagonists.
  • In Elizabeth Peters' mystery novels, Jacqueline Kirby of Coldwater College, Nebraska, has the unique ability to transform herself from a stereotypical librarian -- complete with glasses and sensible shoes -- to a glamorous knockout.
  • In Jo Dereske novels, Helma Zukas of Bellehaven, Washington (her way of swearing is "Oh, Faulkner!").
  • Laurali R. Wright has a series of crime novels set in British Columbia featuring Cassandra Mitchell, librarian and partner of a Royal Canadian Mountie
  • In "It" by Stephen King the central narrator is Mike Hanlon, a librarian in the small town of Derry, Maine. He is described as "the keeper of the lighthouse"
  • In Kingsley Amis' comic novel That Uncertain Feeling, a Welsh librarian bored with his marriage casts his eye upon a new girl in town. In the film version, Only Two Can Play, the librarian was played by Peter Sellers.
  • The manga series Read or Die (a.k.a. R.O.D.) features protagonist bibliophile Yomiko Readman, who works for the Library of England in search of rare and powerful books.
  • Richard Peck's book, Here Lies the Librarian. "This book is dedicated to Living librarians everywhere And to my Dean Beth Mehalick Paskoff," who is Dean of Library and Information Sciences at Louisiana State University. On the cover is a cemetery with a gravestone that reads, "SHH!".

[edit] Television

  • On the March 26, 2007 episode of The Colbert Report, Stephen Colbert (character), making a wild assertion that anything could be copyrighted declared as an example that "librarians are hiding something".
  • In most animated cartoon series, like Baby Looney Tunes to Rugrats, and even Doug, the librarian is often shown silencing the main or pivotal characters, especially younger children, when they're in a library area. Some even ban the characters from the libraries for many rude or strange noises.
  • On the television series All That, there are several sketches that feature a silence-obsessed librarian (known as "The Loud Librarian" to some) that scolds someone for even making a coughing sound. She is eventually "fired" when Lori Beth Denberg leaves the cast in 1998.
  • In the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Anthony Stewart Head played the role of Rupert Giles, school librarian in earlier episodes and Buffy's watcher.
  • In a Star Trek episode All Our Yesterdays, Ian Wolfe plays librarian Mr. Atoz: "The library serves no purpose unless someone is using it." Mr. Atoz's name apparently derives from the phrase "A to Z", a reference to his occupation as a librarian.
  • In the 1967 episode of The Avengers (TV series), "Murdersville," a gun is used with a silencer after the librarian points to the SILENCE sign.[3]
  • In an episode of Seinfeld, Cosmo Kramer (Michael Richards) dates a librarian from the New York Public Library, much to the chagrin of the "library cop."
  • In one episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus wild animals are interviewed for the position of librarian.
  • In one episode of The Simpsons a librarian questions Reverend Lovejoy about a Bible he has checked out every weekend for the past 12 years, asking wouldn't it be easier just to buy one, to which the Reverend replies, "Perhaps...on a Librarian's salary..."
  • The television series Once Upon A Time centers around a librarian trapped in a witch's tower, who is forced to produce stories with a machine called 1Z2Z, and then read them.

[edit] Film

[edit] Toys and hobbies

  • The "Librarian As Shusher" is a consistent cultural stereotype that can be seen in such products as the Librarian Action Figure, an action figure of the stereotypical librarian holding a finger up to her lips, indicating silence.[5] (The figure is modeled after Nancy Pearl, librarian at the Seattle Public Library).
  • Warhammer 40,000 Space Marine Librarians are superhuman fighters with potent psychic powers, rather than just being deskbound intellects. Wielding force staffs and psychic abilities, they are found on the battlefield battling alongside their non-psychic battle brothers delivering justice to the Emperor's enemies, while at the same time advising the Space Marine Commander.

[edit] Computer and video games

[edit] Music

  • Sweet Librarian by Railroad Jerk, from The Third Rail album
  • The Librarian’s Nightmare by Phil Hammon from The Librarian’s Nightmare album
  • "Love in the Library" by Jimmy Buffett, from the Fruitcakes album
  • "Karen" by the Go-Betweens, from the Lee Remick/Karen 7" single
  • Tales of a Librarian, album by Tori Amos
  • The Librarians, defunct Californian power pop band
  • Librarians, rock band from West Virginia
  • Librarian by Jonathan Rundman, from Public Library album
  • Library by Cursor Minor, from Library / Our Day Will Come 7"[6]

[edit] Comic strips

  • Unshelved is an online daily comic strip set in Mallville Public Library reflecting changes in the real world of libraries and with an eye for popular culture.[7]
  • Questionable Content is another webcomic that recently began featuring a character who works in an academic library setting.
  • One Big Happy often features Ruthie at Story Time at her local library. The Library Lady is often despairing of Ruthie's non-sequtorial interruptions.[8]
  • Zits recently featured a strip where Jeremy is in a library and text messages his mother, who is at home, to look up a word for him on the internet.

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.utpjournals.com/simile/issue16/blackmore1.html
  2. ^ http://www.ie.lspace.org/about/whatis-lspace.html
  3. ^ Plot summary and images
  4. ^ http://www.palmpictures.com/videos/lastlifeintheuniverse.html
  5. ^ http://www.mcphee.com/laf/
  6. ^ See the video for Library by Cursor Minor
  7. ^ See the latest comic strip or go to the Unshelved primer
  8. ^ See the latest strip

[edit] External links