I am really looking forward to bringing my talents, training, and passion to some organization and community where I can make a difference. Unfortunately, the time for that to happen turns out to be ... not now. Although I will finish my MLIS next month, I will not be seeking a professional position, or indeed any work outside the home, for the foreseeable future. My partner has developed a serious health condition and I need to focus on taking care of her and the children. When life gets a little more stable and predictable, I will pursue my career. In the meantime, I will continue to offer professional research and tutoring services from home and develop some creative and academic projects, hopefully for publication.
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I haven't been here in a while (not that anyone asked). My youngest daughter (Calliope) was born February 5, two days before Ellowyn's first birthday. I'm in my final semester at Wayne State. Life is chaos with a thin veneer of order, full of cracks that make the chaos visible.
Still, I'm enjoying my classes. In YA Lit, I'm writing two papers on A. S. King, and in the course of that, I've had the good fortune to talk (virtually) with the author herself. In Creative Writing (which won't count toward the MLIS), I am currently writing a scene from a play in which Body and Soul (specifically mandated for this assignment, but I call them Mr. Corpus and Mr. Specter) have a wedding planning business and have a conversation about the floral arrangements for a wedding. It's fun, and creatively satisfying. I've made a start in seeking employment. Had a really good interview with an admirable system, but it was part-time and nonprofessional and over an hour commute. I will get back to that when my head is reasonably well above water. I would love to start the Disrupting Whiteness project, but I don't see that happening for a while. I can't pretend I'm anything but barely holding on, though. I will keep patching over the cracks so the chaos doesn't overwhelm me. Looking at Disrupting Whiteness in Libraries and Librarianship: A Reading List and thinking ... How do you commit to disrupting toxic white maleness and present yourself as the best person for the job as a white male in the library world? I guess I can begin by reading through the Core Resources from that list and reflecting on each of them here. This is not a great historical moment to be a white male. Have to do some real soul searching about how to approach this profession.
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AuthorJeffrey Babbitt, MLIS, is a graduate of the School of Library and Information Science at Wayne State University who is pursuing a career as a librarian in Michigan. Subject Headings
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Inter- Library Loan004.02020025.431027.62090813.009Archives
June 2021
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