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Sunday, September 24, 2023

Happy Birthday, Jim Henson!

Katie Gill
Cataloging Librarian

This post originally broadcast on MLC Moments on Mississippi Public Broadcasting.

It’s time to play the music, it’s time to light the lights, it’s time to get things started on MLC Moments tonight! One of Mississippi’s most famous entertainers has had a long relationship with the written word. From Sesame Street to Scrooge, we’re going to take a brief look at how Jim Henson and the Muppets influenced the wide world of literature. 

On September 24, 1936, Jim Henson was born in Greenville, Mississippi. He spent his childhood in Greenville and nearby Leland before his family moved to Maryland. Henson was a voracious reader as a child, often pouring over The Wizard of Oz series by L. Frank Baum and reprints of the comic strip Pogo by Walt Kelly. As a freshman in college, Henson created Sam and Friends, a five-minute puppet show for a local Washington DC channel. The characters on Sam and Friends were precursors to Henson’s most famous creations, the Muppets. Including icons like Big Bird and Kermit the Frog, the Muppets have set their mark on pop culture ever since their inception.

In 1969, Henson and his crew were tapped to work full time on Sesame Street, a children’s educational program for public television. For the one person listening who doesn’t know what the show is, Sesame Street blends Muppets, human performers, and a child actor cast to learn about basic math and letters as well as more abstract concepts like life changes. Jim Henson: The Biography by Brian Jay Jones quotes Henson as saying, “Kids love to learn and the learning should be exciting and fun. That’s what we’re out to do.” Audiences certainly thought the show was exciting and fun: in 1970, Sesame Street was broadcast in fifty countries and seen by over seven million Americans each day.

Sesame Street was one of the first children’s shows to use a comprehensive educational curriculum, focused on educational goals. Repetition was often used to help young children practice and to make a connection between new and unfamiliar concepts. As children tend to imitate what they see, the show promoted modelling behaviors: if all the characters were inquisitive and loved to learn, hopefully that would inspire children to feel the same. Likewise, the show made itself interesting for parents as well as children thanks to celebrity guest stars and pop culture parodies.

And with Sesame Street came Sesame Street spin-offs. The show’s merchandising effort included tie-in toys, programs, and, obviously, books. Some of those books have become as classic as the show itself. The Monster At the End of the Book is written by Jon Stone and illustrated by Mike Smollin. Starring lovable, furry old Grover, Grover is surprised and scared to learn about the monster! He tries to prevent the reader from turning the pages only to discover that HE is the monster himself. The book has continuously been in print ever since it’s 1971 publication and, in 2012, was ranked number ten on the top 100 picture books in a survey published by School Library Journal.

Sesame Street wasn’t the only property that Henson created with a literary twist. The Muppet Show featured an episode starring Brooke Shields that was a full pastiche of the story Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll. In 1987, Henson created and produced The Storyteller, a television show released on NBC and later HBO. The Storyteller retold folk stories and fairy tales, which were performed by a cast of human and Muppet performers. The show specifically focused on more obscure European fairy tales, choosing lesser known stories such as “The Six Swans” or “Hans My Hedgehog.” A spinoff series, The Storyteller: Greek Myths, focused on just what the title says. Though only thirteen episodes were made, The Storyteller was a critical success, winning the 1987 Emmy Award for Outstanding Children’s Program

Jim Henson died on May 16, 1990 at the age of 53 due to a bacterial infection. Even after Henson’s death, the Muppets still promote literacy and help encourage people to read. Sesame Street is still running and entertaining children to this day. Millennials like myself probably have nostalgic attachment to two literary Muppet films: A Muppet Christmas Carol and Muppet Treasure Island. Both films retold two literary classics, A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens and Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson, infusing them with trademark Muppet humor and a lot of goofiness while still faithfully retaining the nature of the original text.

To learn more about Jim Henson, his life, and his works, we recommend checking out Jim Henson: The Biography by Brian Jay Jones, available at your local public library.

Friday, September 22, 2023

Hola, Hispanic Heritage Month!

Elisabeth Scott
Reference Librarian/Literacy Projects Coordinator

National Hispanic Heritage Month began earlier this month on the fifteenth. Did you know that, according to population estimates, 3.4% of Mississippi's population identifies as Hispanic or Latino and a whopping 18.5% of the United States's population does the same? In fact, Hispanics are one of the fastest growing minority groups in the nation, and the fastest growing group in the South. We thought it would be fun to tie in this month's reading prompt "Read a Classic" with just a few of our favorite old and new classic Hispanic authors. Check them out below!

 

  • Isabel Allende was born in Peru in 1942 to Chilean parents, but now lives in California. She became a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 2004 and won the Chilean National Prize for Literature in 2010. Start with her 1982 book The House of the Spirits, which began as a letter to her grandfather.
  • Rudolfo Anaya was born in New Mexico in 1937. Anaya is one of the grandfathers of Chicano literature and won an American Book Award and a National Medal of Arts. Start with his 1972 classic Bless Me, Ultima, the first in a trilogy of books set in his home state.
  • Sandra Cisneros was born in Chicago in 1954 to parents from Mexico/of Mexican descent. She has won an American Book Award and a MacArthur Genius Grant. Start with her second book, The House on Mango Street, a collection of linked vignettes. Cisneros began work on it as a graduate student; it was published in 1984.
  • Juan Felipe Herrera was born in California in 1948. He served as the Poet Laureate of the United States from 2015-2017 and was elected as a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets in 2011. Start with 2008's Half the World in Light.
  • Oscar Hijuelos was born in New York City in 1951; both his parents were originally from Cuba. He won a Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1990. Start with his prize-winning novel from 1989, The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love.

These five authors can be found at the Mississippi Library Commission, your local public library, and BARD. These are also great places to explore other books written by Hispanic and Latino authors. If you would like to learn more about Hispanic heritage and culture, you should look into what the National Park Service, the Smithsonian, and the National Endowment for the Humanities have put together for you. We hope the next month is filled with revelatory reading and learning for you. Until next time, happy reading!

Thursday, September 14, 2023

Read With MLC: A Classic You've Been Meaning to Read

2023 is inexplicably and inevitably drawing to a close. As the days grow shorter and the temperature (hopefully) grows cooler, it's the perfect time of year to dig into great reads that entertain and enlighten, but hey, it's also a great time to focus on finishing this year's reading goals. Our Read With MLC challenge prompt for September is to check out a classic you've been meaning to read. Sure, you can turn to Dickens, Plato, or Voltaire, and you're welcome to do so if you want to give them a try, but there are a lot of amazing books out there hovering right under your radar. Just what qualifies as a classic? And what should you read this September? Settle in while we explore!

Monday, September 11, 2023

Librarianship 101: MLC's Annual Learn-How-To-Library Workshop

Elisabeth Scott
Reference Librarian/Literacy Projects Coordinator

Let's get ready to liiiiiiibrary! The Mississippi Library Commission (MLC) will welcome a new group of library paraprofessionals to our annual Librarianship 101 tomorrow, and we can't wait to get started helping them become the best librarians they can be. After all, a great librarian gives great library service!

 

This intensive three-day workshop, which is made possible in part by funds from the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), brings library staff from across Mississippi to the state capital here in Jackson to learn more about libraries. That may sound simple, but the nearly thirty students in attendance will receive an overview of everything library. This includes:

  • A rundown of core library services, such as reference interviews and practices, collection development, programming, cataloging, weeding, and readers' advisory
  • An overview of outreach, which encompasses community partnerships, social media, and library marketing
  • Mississippi-specific subjects, like local library law and MAGNOLIA databases
  • A synopsis of MLC services, like Talking Book Services and Technology Services, and a Petting Zoo featuring MLC's special collection kits

Attendees will also learn the results of their Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) tests, a personality test that can be used to gain perspective on the ways people work together. Paired with the abundance of networking opportunities over the three-day period, this jam-packed workshop gifts participants with a life-long learning experience that will help them serve their home communities and meet their library needs. Even better, participants create and carry out a library project in their home libraries that gives back to their communities and helps Mississippians reach their full potential. 

Librarianship started back in 2004, and MLC staff are proud to say that we have helped train a generation of library paraprofessionals in our state. Many have gone on to pursue further education in the library field and moved up the library ladder into leadership roles. The annual Mississippi Library Association conference provides an opportunity for everyone to reconnect, a mini-Librarianship 101 reunion, if you will. This week will be the library experience of a lifetime for many of the people visiting Jackson in the upcoming days, so please wish them a good time and the best of luck!

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