President Barack
Obama may have a hard time appointing a nominee to the United States Supreme Court
to replace the recently deceased Justice Antonin Scalia, but he just nominated
someone to replace another Reagan appointee -- for Librarian of Congress.
James Billington
retired in January after serving nearly 30 years as the Librarian of
Congress. President Obama just nominated
Dr. Carla Hayden, an African American woman to replace interim director David
Mao. She could become the 14th
Librarian of Congress – and the first professional librarian to serve on a
full-time basis since Lawrence Q. Mumford retired over 60 years ago.
The American Library
Association hailed the selection. Hayden
served as their president from 2003 to 2004.
She can make double history if approved – first woman, first African American
to hold the post of Librarian of Congress.
Two decades ago she
was the first African American to receive Library Journal’s Librarian of the
Year Award.
Though the recently
retired Librarian of Congress was criticized for sitting on the sidelines while
the digital revolution swept through the book world and society at large,
Hayden vows to bring modernization to libraries.
One immediate issue
she’ll need to deal with is a proposed bill made by two lawmakers last year to
remove the Copyright Office from under the purview of the Library of Congress.
She will also be
forced to get things done in a faster time period. She will be the first to hold her position
under a term limit. Her 10-year stint won’t compare to the prior 13 librarians
that have ruled since 1802 -- each serving an average of 17 years.
Though the library
was established by Congress in 1800, it wasn’t until 1802 that President Thomas
Jefferson appointed the first Librarian of Congress. It wasn’t until 1897 that Congress was given
the power to review and approve of the nomination.
The interim head
earns $184,000 annually. There are no official rules as to who qualifies to be
the head librarian. The position has
been held by politicians, authors, lawyers, businessmen, poets, historians, and librarians.
The duties of the
Librarian of Congress are numerous and significant. He or she doesn’t just
oversee the collection of books, but also the collection, cataloguing and
preserving of films, recorded sounds, images, and other pop-culture items. It has a huge repository of newspapers and
magazines as well.
The Librarian is
charged with running the world’s largest library, managing a staff of thousands.
He or she oversees the Copyright Office, appoints the U.S. Poet Laureate, and
determines three-year exemptions form the Digital Copyright Millennium Act.
In short, our
cultural heritage is being entrusted to the next Librarian of Congress. He or she could determine how and which
information gets saved, promoted, and made available to the public. Our books and information, culture and media
are not to just be left in the control of Google, Amazon, The New York Times,
Netflix or Harvard University. The
Librarian of Congress is a very important position that I hope the American
public will become more familiar with.
Brian Feinblum’s views, opinions, and ideas expressed in this blog are his alone and not that of his employer. You can follow him on Twitter @theprexpert and email him at brianfeinblum@gmail.com. He feels more important when discussed in the third-person. This is copyrighted by BookMarketingBuzzBlog © 201
2016 Book Marketing & Book Publicity Toolkit
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