http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/jan/17/twitter-support-libraries-worldwide
Twitter support for
libraries snowballs worldwide
Savelibraries hashtag
picks up support from thousands around the world
A simple tweet from a
Shropshire ICT lecturer musing on libraries while doing her laundry of a Sunday
morning resulted in the hashtag #savelibraries
trending worldwide yesterday.
"Libraries are
important because ... [fill in your answer & RT] #savelibraries",
Mar Dixon tweeted. More than 5,000 people responded spontaneously to her
invitation, which was retweeted by, among others,
Margaret Atwood and Neil Gaiman.
Top tweets under the hashtag include @genrelibrarian's,
retweeted by Neil Gaiman
and more than 100 others: "Google can bring back
a hundred thousand answers. A librarian can bring you back the right one."
Other most retweeted comments include @JoannaCannon's "Libraries are important because, as a
child, some of my best friends lived within the pages of a book" and actor
Samuel West as @exitthelemming's "Times says
Govt. report wants children to be 'school ready'. Perhaps not closing libraries
would be a good start?" Radio and TV presenter Lauren Laverne also got
involved this morning, tweeting: "Knowledge is power and all that but our
libraries need us to help defend them". So too did comedian Robin Ince, asking "do you remember the first book you took
out of the library?"
Hundreds more offered
personal perspectives. @flangelina_iow wrote:
"Library books fed my passion for reading as a child. Please don't steal
these moments from our children, they are our future!" while @bootbrush wrote: "I learned more by exploring knowledge
in the library than I ever did at school."
Dixon, an American
living in Bridgenorth in Shropshire, said the
reaction to her tweet was totally unexpected. "It was not a planned
campaign," she said. "My day was doing the laundry and going to the
shops and writing my assignment and taking back the dog we'd been dog-sitting.
But I read a news piece online about libraries closing which I thought was very
London-based, so I tweeted to invite people to give their own take on
libraries. One person retweeted
it, then another, and @Ukpling [the Twitter address
for campaign group Voices for the Library] also got involved. When Neil Gaiman picked it up it really took off in the US, where
they also have this plight with libraries hit by cuts."
The hashtag
was also picked up in Portugal and Italy, and was world trending in second or
third place by Sunday mid-afternoon, Dixon said. "It's reached over 5,000
tweets and is still going today, but I've got to teach this morning so I'll
check in with it tonight," she added.
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