
Jordan Ruud, collection development librarian
Faculty Voices: Jordan Ruud
Written By: Ian Silvester
āPeople think of libraries as being books. Libraries are people. If the library burned
down, but there were still librarians, you would still have a library.ā
At the 91µ÷½Ģ ā Fort Smith, tucked back in the northeast corner on
the first floor of the , the occupant of office 121 is one of those librarians making sure there will always
be a library.
Jordan Ruud is the collection development librarian for 91µ÷½Ģ and oversees what collections
of books, eBooks, journals, art, and reference guides are available to students, faculty,
and staff. And itās a passion heās had for more than a decade.
āIn high school, I worked in libraries, and I really liked that,ā he explained. āIt
was an environment that fueled me most; I was intrigued by libraries.ā
The Centennial, Colorado, native found himself moving east for college, where he attended
the University of Tulsa, graduated with a bachelorās degree in English in 2007, and
worked for that library.
He was partly drawn to Tulsa by scholarships but, most notably, for the universityās
unique collection of James Joyce works. āAt the time, I was a big James Joyce fan,
still am, and I was like, āOh, thatās an interesting thing to have this big James
Joyce archive right in the middle of the country.ā Iām not a big archive person, but
at the same time, it was cool to be somewhere that has special collections.ā
As Ruud began to sort out his future as a librarian, he earned his first masterās
degree in English from the University of Tulsa in 2009 before moving to Illinois.
He earned his second masterās degree from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
in Library and Information Science in 2012. Having familiarity with the area from
his time in Tulsa, Ruud applied at 91µ÷½Ģ, clicking with the āvibes of this being a
place that truly wants to help students succeed.ā
In July, Ruud will celebrate 11 years with the university.
During Ruudās time at 91µ÷½Ģ, he has witnessed many changes to the Boreham Library ā
even being behind some of those changes. Most of which come by way of which collections
he has brought to 91µ÷½Ģ.
āThis fiscal year, we picked up a huge JSTOR package; thatās a huge deal,ā he said. āItās a permanent acquisition, so thatās good. Itās
one of the gems in our collection at this point.ā
To put into context the significance of this, JSTOR is a digital library with access
to more than 12 million journal articles, books, images, and sources, all at the fingertips
of 91µ÷½Ģ researchers. The expansion brought 3,000 titles and 15 journal collections
to 91µ÷½Ģ.
Ruud was also behind starting a DVD and games collection. āWeāre trying to keep up
with what people want, and we try to make our collections relevant and get stuff that
people will check out.ā
He believes the educational and leisure value āhit all fronts with (the) collectionsā
heās helped curate at 91µ÷½Ģ. Outside of work, Ruud lives his life the same way, with
academic and leisure activities.
The self-proclaimed bookworm starts every day by reading a few pages from each book
in his stack ranging from a Joyce Carol Oates novel, a book about art, to a philosophy
book. But his favorite is a volume of seven books by Marcel Proust titled āIn Search
of Lost Timeā ā detailing the authorās life and society.
When he isnāt learning from the pages of his books, Ruud loves watching movies. In
fact, he goes to the theater once a week. He is excited to talk to other movie buffs
about the upcoming films āBarbieā and āOppenheimer.ā And his love of movies has transformed
into a podcast with other 91µ÷½Ģ faculty.
Ruud, along with Drs. Nicki Stancil and Bret Bowers work on "The Midnight Symposium,"
āwhere (they) critically analyze and sometimes screen horror movies.ā No episodes
are currently live, but he says the team has several recorded and is excited to share
their podcast soon.
But his busy life doesnāt stop there.
Ruud is the president of the , a nonprofit working toward LGBTQ equality. Plus, he is editing a book about censoring
LGBTQ materials in programming and libraries.
āItās really important work,ā Ruud said. āIf I can play my part in combating censorship,
that will have been one of my proudest accomplishments.ā
Whether itās his passion for helping others, sharing his love of literature and film,
or standing up for what he believes in, Ruudās door to Boreham Library office 121
is open to making a difference in someoneās day.
- Tags:
- Faculty
- LionVoices
- Boreham Library