Dear Friends and Colleagues,
At a recent event in New York an ARLIS/NA member I hadn't seen in
a year told me she had been keeping up with my activities through
ARLIS-L and was concerned because I had stopped posting. It was
not my choice, but the management decision that Gregg wrote about
yesterday.
Under this new enforcement interpretation of an old rule they
decided that my posts are commercial and I cannot include links to
my art historical blog on The Art of American Book Covers, because
on that site you might come across links to books on that subject
that you could acquire. I was told that I cannot include links to
my website, or the URL in my signature. This e-mail contains no
links for that reason.
As an independent bibliographer, educator, book artist and
ARLIS/NA member whose roots go back to Judith Hoffberg in the mid
1970s, I have participated in many ARLIS discussions, presented
papers at ARLIS/NA and for ARLIS/NA at CAA, and exhibited at
ARLIS/NA conferences. I also have contributed thousands of dollars
as a conference sponsor to support the organization. More than a
hundred ARLIS/NA institutions have my work in their collections.
The administration told me in November they were considering what
the listserv guidelines should be going forward. In the last five
months they have taken no action to remediate this situation. I am
asking you to please support a policy that does not censor artists
and scholars because a post may link to a site where you also may
find an offering of relevant material.
I think Gregg's idea of an ARLIS/NA Marketplace or something
similar would be a valuable resource for everybody, and will talk
with him about it in Washington, but that is not a substitute for
a responsible policy on ARLIS-L.
Other library-oriented lists have adopted reasonable guidelines.
Exlibris-L, the rare book and special collections listserv, allows
commercial posts on Tuesdays, for example, when booksellers post
links to sales lists of rare books (the lists are not posted) and
what they will be bringing to book fairs. Those who post
non-commercial messages to Exlibris-L at any time include their
URL in their signature. The Moderator of that list advised me
years ago that posts of announcements about my books on the art of
American book covers are always welcome.
There is also an economic loss to ARLIS/NA members from this new
enforcement interpretation. I used to post notices of
pre-publication discounts here, saving many members important
budget resources they could allocate to other items. That also
helped me do the research and produce the books. We all lose under
this arcane interpretation.
Please tell our administration that you support a sensible posting
policy on ARLIS-L.
See you in Washington!
Warm regards,
Richard
On 4/10/2014 2:22 PM, Most, Gregory P.J. wrote: