Please join us at Podcast Brunch Club on Thursday May 14 at 11:00 AM for our monthly look at some interesting podcasts. This month’s time will be taking a look at the EVOLUTION OF LIBRARIES. Please listen to these selected podcasts and join us on GOOGLE MEETS for a lively discussion.
Meeting place: Meeting ID
https://podcastbrunchclub.com/libraries/
Podcast Listening List on The Evolution of Libraries
Podcast: This American Life
Episode: 664: The Room of Requirement (December 2018, 60 minutes)
Illuminating and unique exploration of the subject that examines what various libraries have meant to various people.
Podcast: FYI: The Public Libraries Podcast
Episode: FYI 024 Guest: Nicholas Higgins — Library Service to Jails and Prisons (November 2017, 17 minutes)
A great example of what a library in a nonconventional space looks like.
Podcast: Part-Time Genius
Episode: Is There a Rosy Future for Libraries (December 2017, 38 minutes)
Examining the current relevance/use of libraries, the history and evolution of libraries, and a quick run down of several of the new things that libraries offer. In the episode, they mention this BBC article, “Syria’s Secret Library.”
Podcast: Shmanners
Episode: Libraries (July 2017, 47 minutes)
A good overview of the history of libraries and public libraries specifically, as well as adding some levity to the playlist.
Podcast: Down to Earth
Episode: 07.06.18 – Libraries (August 2018, 20 minutes)
A perspective from outside the United States looking into why libraries are important and some of the funding challenges facing libraries.
Podcast: 99% Invisible
Episode: 346 - Palaces for the People (March 19, 2019, 46 minutes)
Social Infrastructure is the glue that binds communities together, and it is just as real as the infrastructure for water, power, or communications, although it is often harder to see. But Eric Lineberg says that when we invest in social infrastructures such as libraries, parks, or schools, we reap all kinds of benefits. We become more likely to interact with people around us, and connected to the broader public. If we neglect social infrastructure, we tend to grow more isolated, which can have serious consequences.