Archive | JTPL Stories

Checking the Facts with Diane

This is the second edition of JTPL Stories: a series of interviews with library patrons, staff, and partners. Continue below to meet the faces of JTPL with our Marketing Coordinator, Aliya!

Diane pulls a reference book off the shelves of Jeffersonville’s Indiana Room.

At JTPL, Diane is known for her smile, her stories, and her incredible historical knowledge. As the family and local history librarian, she always has a new tale to tell about Jeffersonville or Clark County.

I learned a dozen new things as I interviewed her this last week. Diane is meticulous about getting the right details from reliable sources in every story she tells, whether it’s a story about Aaron Burr’s time in Jeffersonville or the local African American heroes display she created in February.

Finding those sources is what she wanted to talk about when I asked if she would be featured in our blog.

“If you go around asking people for stories, you’ll get stories,” she told me. “But as a local historian you need to know where to get good information.”

“As a local historian, you need to know where to get good information”

Diane shows me a decades-old fire insurance map of Jeffersonville from our collection.

Getting good information has been at the heart of all of Diane’s careers: from a brief stint as a journalist, to her former career as a professor, to her current work as a librarian. And it’s hard work; Diane told me that only about 10% of written material has been digitized. The rest is hidden somewhere in a library and has to be dug up by hand, something her Indiana Room is great for.

Even when information is on the internet, it’s cluttered with sites posting unverified stories to accounts on social media. Even things appearing to be local news may not be what they seem. “You follow some of these accounts back,” Diane said, “and none of them are from our zip codes… I’ve had a good record of reporting these kinds of accounts and getting them banned.”

Last month, Diane put together a local African American heroes display to help patrons get to know real local history that is often overlooked. She featured Obediah Buckner, Mary Bateman Clark, George and Molly Denning, and more. Local Black history can be hard to find and even harder to verify, but she believes it’s important work.

Investigating misinformation and determining the real facts has gotten even more difficult and important over the last decade, and Diane is concerned that it’s a skill increasingly relevant to her patrons’ daily lives. She cited the rise of anti-vaccination movements as one of the biggest impacts of this crisis of information.

Her patrons have been concerned as well, which is why Diane’s job has shifted toward helping them with misinformation.

“The main question I get [from patrons],” she told me, “is: ‘My family believes fake news; how can I stop them?’”

I asked Diane if she has any tips she tends to tell people.

“Go to some reliable information sources and professionals,” she said, “and evaluate where the articles you read are coming from.” Diane tells patrons to follow the money. If someone is benefiting off of a controversial claim or paying for you to read it, there is good reason to suspect that the claim isn’t true.

Libraries are full of print archives and reference materials for patrons to fact check with such as these in Diane’s collection.

But it can be hard to convince someone to second guess everything they read, especially if they don’t trust established sources and experts. “It’s devastating because nobody has a really good answer,” she told me. “The only good answer anybody has gotten is to turn off social media. When people do that, they suddenly change their opinions… But you can’t convince somebody to do that on their own.”

Diane encourages more people to go back to print and take pride in doing their own research. She continues to invite people to the Indiana Room and to the library, and she enjoys helping them find the facts for their own stories.

And for people who want to still want to wade through social media? She suggests this article as a beginner’s course on spotting misinformation: https://library.csi.cuny.edu/misinformation/spotfakenews

Want to meet Diane or research local history and genealogy? Come to our Indiana Room in Jeffersonville or try out the online databases we have access to here.

A Goliath of the Makerspace

This is the first edition of JTPL Stories: a series of interviews with library patrons, staff, and partners. Continue below to meet the faces of JTPL with our Marketing Coordinator, Aliya!

Justin shows off his project of the day.

If you’ve walked through the Makerspace at Jeffersonville, chances are you’ve met Justin at one of the work stations. For three or four days each week, he creates intricate designs of T.V. show characters and manga art for his clients from all over the country. One day he might be at the laser engraver making a wooden etching of a custom Pokémon card, and the next he could be 3D printing a reproduction movie prop. Last Monday, I found him making this commission above from the show Dragon Ball Z.

After seeing Justin come in for so long and learning how friendly and talented he was, I knew I had to get an interview so our readers could meet him too.

I might have also wanted pictures of his service dog.

“We would go to these conventions and see all the things [vendors were selling] and just go, wow, that’s terrible.”

Justin and his service dog, Vixen, often use our study rooms to work.

As we spoke, Justin, also known as Goliath, got right into talking about his company, ARK Studios, that he makes his creations for.

“We really got started back in college,” Goliath told me, “my friends and I all got into cosplay, Twitch streaming, YouTubing… We would go to these conventions and see all the things [vendors were selling] and just go, wow, that’s terrible.”

Conventions were great places for fans of the anime and T.V. shows Justin liked to gather together and buy art and merchandise. Much of what was sold, though, felt like low quality money grabs that took advantage of the community. “They were making it just to make a buck because they saw we liked to collect stuff,” he said. “Instead of taking the time to detail things, they put no passion into it.”

Two years ago, Justin and his friends put together an LLC and began to create their own work. Justin’s goal was to create high quality commissions for fans similarly disappointed by the lack of effort and detail bigger companies put into their merchandise. With his new business, clients could contact him with an idea for a custom art piece or 3D print they wanted, and he could create exactly what they had in mind.

Goliath designs his creations digitally and configures our Glowforge to engrave them.

At first it was little projects here and there. The nine people involved with ARK Studios live all across the country and didn’t have the time or resources to put together a physical studio for streaming video or creating commissions. Then Justin heard about the Makerspace.

“I got Vincent and Stuart to give me the tour of all the things they had,” he said, “and I was like, I can use all of this. I can learn to use all of this.” He’s spent the last year and a half learning and experimenting with the equipment we have here, and he’s tremendously ramped up production with our resources. He has even told his friends how to find and use Makerspaces near them.

Justin told me his goal is to make ARK Studios his full-time job and one day host his own community space where other creators and fans can make their own quality, show-worthy costumes, art, and collectables. Having the money for his own equipment will take some time, but for now the Makerspace provides a place for him to experiment and continue to grow his business.

Justin worked on this anime-accurate 3D printed piece as I interviewed him.

Justin finished our interview with some encouragement:

“The younger generation of nerds has a chance at something that my generation did not. When we grew up, we were all still black sheep figuring out things on our own going no-one understands me… Now there’s a whole generation behind [the new generation] saying we already went through all of this. Come with us young padawan and we will show you the ways of the Force.”

The Force, in this case, is how to create movie accurate lightsabers and replica starships that won’t fall apart on the way home. Justin hopes new access to resources like Makerspaces and popular culture’s growing acceptance of nerds will build the community.

I’m certainly excited to see him create that community here in Jeffersonville.

You can come by and meet Goliath or create a commission for your own projects by contacting him on his Instagram or email.

Want to try out the Makerspace for yourself? Reserve a timeslot for a certification class here. Goliath suggests new users start with the Glowforge and digital design tools.