
About this Event
This session will encourage us to reflect upon what libraries mean to us today. We will consider the function that libraries play in our ever-more-digital world and explore how technology both helps and hinders the work of librarians and the access to literature for readers everywhere.
Please come with a note or drawing of one thing you love about modern libraries, and one thing that troubles you about modern libraries, or their place in our society.
The workshop will begin and end with embodied movement and relaxation to help us connect to ourselves, one another and the space. We will share ideas and engage in a series of experimental writing exercises. This workshop will also include a tour of the National Library of Scotland.
Please wear comfortable clothes and bring whatever you love to write on and with.
This session is the second in a three-part series creatively responding to memories of libraries in our past, libraries of the present and the future. Participants can choose to attend one, two, or all three of the sessions in the series. The final session will be advertised later in the year.
About the workshop leader:
Jennifer Williams is a poet and creator of Utopia Lab at the Edinburgh Futures Institute.
Image credit Rick Han.
When you book an event, your personal information will be held and used by the National Library of Scotland and our third-party suppliers for the purposes of allowing you to attend the event and for audience research. For more information, visit the National Library of Scotland privacy pages, in particular the events notice and feedback and complaints notice. We expect attendees to behave respectfully towards presenters, guests and other audience members.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
National Library of Scotland, George IV Bridge, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
GBP 5.00