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2009 Carol Spaziani Intellectual Freedom Festival

by April Harder on September 22nd, 2009

ICPL to host Iowa City Intellectual Freedom Festival events from September 25−October 15, 2009.

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What is Intellectual Freedom?

Intellectual Freedom is a basic human right, defined by Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 1948. The American Library Association affirms Intellectual Freedom as a basis for our democratic system and recognizes the important role libraries play in Intellectual Freedom issues. To be responsible citizens who have the ability to self-govern, we must be well-informed. Libraries provide information, ideas and resources in a variety of formats, enabling an informed citizenry.

About the Intellectual Freedom Festival

In 1995, the Iowa City Public Library established the annual Carol Spaziani Intellectual Freedom Festival to honor Carol’s 26-year career at ICPL and life-long commitment to the freedom of ideas. Spaziani believes the public library’s role is to be a resource and a forum for an individual’s pursuit and expression of diverse points of view. A Library committee monitors current intellectual freedom issues and plans programs of interest for area residents. This year the Library is collaborating with the UI School of Library and Information Science on Freedom Festival programs.

IF YOU GO:

Film Screening: Bloody Cartoons: Freedom of Expression and the Clash of Cultures.
7 p.m. Friday, Sept. 25, Meeting Room A
iffbloodycartoonsBloody Cartoons is a documentary about how and why 12 drawings in a Danish provincial paper could whirl a small country into a confrontation with Muslims all over the world. The filmmaker asks whether respect for Islam combined with the heated response to the cartoons is now leading us towards self-censorship. How tolerant should we be, he wonders, of the intolerant. And what limits should there be, if any, to freedom of speech in a democracy.

Brownbag Lunch: Public Libraries, Budget Cuts and Intellectual Freedom: A Conversation about the State of Iowa Libraries.
Noon Wednesday, Sept. 30, Meeting Room A
ifflogoblue1The panel includes:
Nick Shimmin – Director, West Branch Public Library
Jennie Garner – Assistant Director, North Liberty Community Library
Barb Black – Technical Services Coordinator, Iowa City Public Library
Mike Jorgensen – Adult Services Librarian, Coralville Public Library
Jason Paulious – Young Adult Librarian, Iowa City Public Library
Mike Wright – Head of Acquisitions and Copy Cataloging, University of Iowa Library

Brownbag Lunch: What Producing, Sampling, Remixing and Broadcasting have to teach us about copyright and the freedom to create: Intellectual Freedom Remix feat. Tack-Fu, the Chaircrusher, Pirate Radio and Kembrew McLeod.
Noon Wednesday, Oct. 7, Meeting Room A
tack_catholicMusic, film, books and other media have become imminently shareable with the advent of internet broadband communications. Some artists see this as a threat to their rights under copyright law, while others view this as an opportunity to freely distribute and transform old media in order to create new works of art. The passing of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) in 1996 is just one instance of new legislation designed by rights-holders to protect intellectual property in an age of shareable digital media. Meanwhile, a counter-movement of artists argues that strict copyright laws stifle intellectual freedom and creativity.
Kembrew McLeod is a Professor of Communications at the University of Iowa and an activist for copyright reform and creative commons licensing. He has copyrighted the phrase “Freedom of Expression” as a statement about the chilling effects of current copyright laws in the U.S. (http://www.copyrightcriminals.com).
Tack-Fu and the Chaircrusher are local hip-hop producers who live by their own set of rules for sampling other musicians’ work to create new and innovative music. (http://www.tackfu.com)
Pirate Radio broadcasts music, talk, poetry, radio drama (an original is currently in production), and even weekly bedtime stories from Iowa City. They work independently of the FCC, which is the federal department that determines who is eligible for broadcasting licenses.

Criticism in the (Digital) Public Sphere, Discussing Books in the Age of New Media: Humanities Symposium with the University of Iowa Obermann Center for Advanced Studies.
(Co-sponsored by UI International Programs.)
7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 15, Meeting Room A
iffobermanThe panel includes:
Scott McLemee, Essayist at Large, Inside Higher Ed. (http://mclemee.com/)
Christopher Merrill, Professor of English and Director of the International Writing Program, University of Iowa. “Reviewing Books for PRI’s The World” (http://www.theworld.org/books/)
Meena Kandsamy, author, translator, and participant in the 2009 International Writing Program “Meena Kandsamy: A blog by a 24-year-old Tamil woman obsessed with Dr. Ambedkar’s dream of caste annihilation.” (http://meenu.wordpress.com/)
This panel is co-sponsored by the International Writing Program, UI Libraries, the UI Press, the UI Center for the Book, the Department of History and the Department of English.

Celebrate your intellectual freedom and head to the Library for these programs and discussions. For more information, call the Fiction Desk at 356-5200, option 4.

For more information, contact:
April Jo Harder
Public Relations Specialist
Iowa City Public Library
P: 319-887-6216
E: april-harder@icpl.org

Get all the latest ICPL news in the Newsroom at http://newsroom.icpl.org/.

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