this post was submitted on 16 Jan 2024
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I’ve been wanting to do some scenes from a library economy for a while now, glad to finally get the chance.

I've mentioned elsewhere that these postcards are a bit earlier in the solarpunk timeline than a lot of other works I know of in the genre. I like seeing the work in progress, the intermediate steps. Most solarpunk stuff I've read has climate disasters, wars, plagues, etc in its backstory. I set my stuff a bit closer to those events because I'm interested in what the earlier days of rebuilding look like.

So I think this photobash is set somewhere in the transition towards a library economy. If you want to see what one of those looks like in full swing, the sort of lived experience, I'd very much recommend AE Marling's Murder in the Tool Library and it's sequel.

I love the idea of a society with a cultural focus on reuse rather than extraction and production and disposal. A society where the massive logistics arms of government and industry are turned to salvaging, organizing, and repurposing, rather than extracting materials and packing landfills with waste. A society where the wealth of usable product we currently throw away is treated like a natural resource to be found and traded between people in the thousand year cleanup.

This being the earlier days, I thought about how all this stuff gets moved gently into that system, and how society transitions in that direction without ripping ownership of things away from individuals.

The easiest way I could come up with would be to start with a new refuse stream and the infrastructure to handle it. Our society throws away an incredible amount of intact, usable, or fixable stuff. A future society with the organization to catch and sort it, perhaps enabled and supported by a culture that's already been through hard times and has relearned the value of thrift, could stock many common items that way.

Worldbuilding-wise, maybe it's a matter of necessity - maybe supply chains have long been broken, and cheaply exploited labor and imported resources are already a thing of the past. Maybe this represents the organization and formalization of ad-hoc systems like Buy Nothing and the simple act of passing hand-me-downs between relatives. Maybe they’re just trying to do better.

I imagine they’d start by building community stockpiles that probably look like the swap shop at the average dump. But a society needs more organization and reliability that that. So they’d repurpose old warehouses for specialized storage and as workshops so they could sort the incoming stream of appliances, furniture, computers, tools, fish tanks, sports equipment, etc, triage it, assess damage, and make repairs, prioritizing getting the undamaged stuff quickly back into use.

They’d need dedicated libraries and knowledgeable librarians to house and loan each category of items, and I hope they’d partner with local organizations who are already specialized in the right areas. Maybe a makerspace can manage a tool library, perhaps some shops can transition towards loaning out items they receive for free.

At this point in the timeline they probably only loan some items, others are just given away or sold for very cheap, on the condition that, eventually, they get returned to the library rather than destroyed. Perhaps this is how they keep items in circulation that they don’t yet have the means to formally store and curate.

I’ll caveat all this by admitting I’m weak on the economic theory and the logistics – if you want to know more about how library economies could work, better minds than me have put a lot of thought into it. Personally I don’t think loans etc would cover all of society’s needs, and I don’t think I’d want them to. People will still own the things that matter to them. But I think it could be a wonderful way to replace the cheapest (and often most harmful) options in any given market. The kind of thing you buy with the intent to only keep it for a short while anyways.

Take furniture for example - in this setting, if you want something super fancy or new, you probably still go to a small workshop with skilled craftspeople and order to spec or from their catalogue. But if you're a college kid just starting out, instead of going to walmart or amazon and buying something made cheap by massive corporations exploiting their workers and sometimes utilizing slavery overseas, you go to a library and borrow something. This might look a lot like how libraries operate now, or it might look more like Habitat for Humanity's Restore or a municipal recycling center's swap shop where you buy or take the thing with no obligation to return it. Maybe you’d order it from an eBay-like catalogue website and they’d shuffle it to the library closest to you (regardless of its specialty) so you can pick it up.

The process of collections probably varies by location - in some areas they do pickup and delivery, in others maybe they use libraries as collection points. It probably varies by item too.

Either way, here's a scene of a little piece of that process. A team of volunteers taking an electric truck on a route through the city, collecting and/or delivering heavy items.

My goals for the truck were kind of a mix of art goals and worldbuilding goals. Whenever I include a vehicle in a scene, I try to convey visually that this isn't a car-centric future, with everyone just driving around in personal vehicles like they do today. (Electric vehicles are tricky because they look fairly normal and modern.) I wanted it to be clear that this thing fits a specific use case. The homemade back was kind of a mix of wanting to be able to show the contents, and wanting to imply that this truck wasn't fabricated new for the city. Maybe it's like the stuff it's hauling, secondhand but still good enough for the job. Maybe it's been pulled from a junkyard and repaired, missing pieces replaced with scrap materials.

The overhead pantograph rig is borrowed from a bus - I love streetcars and similar simple electric vehicles, but I thought this truck would require more freedom on its route, so I found (I think) a rig that allows for quickly connecting and disconnecting. In real life the buses use gas or diesel when their electricity is disconnected, but I think the truck could just be using a battery that's too small or old or simple to pack enough energy for its full route. That hopefully wouldn't matter since it only needs it for short trips: switching between overhead wires, traversing streets without them, and getting out of the way of streetcars.

As for the plants in the scene (for someone who hates landscaping, I seem to do it fairly often, digitally) in the foreground we've got raspberry bushes (hopefully thornless) on either side and wildflowers for bees in the center, and a blueberry bush, pear tree, and apple tree across the street. I think it's possible for all this to be in season at once around August.

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[–] andrewrgross 2 points 10 months ago

I really like this photobash. The pantograph especially is really charming.

I also think this captures well the concept that I think a lot of people struggle with: that we can experience abundance and an end of scarcity even as we embrace degrowth.

[–] andrewrgross 2 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

I love this.

Also, I feel like it's already really on the way. It's wild to me that my son -- who is four -- totally gets library economies. He loves going to the library, and he fully understands that he's borrowing items owned by the commons. He knows the difference between books that we keep and books we borrow. He keeps good track of his books, and has learned he can't draw in them.

He knows that he has to return the books (even if he might prefer to keep them longer) so that other kids get a chance, and also that we can take them out again soon. He knows that the library loans out toys, and he loves picking out toys and checking them out himself. It seems clear that he enjoys the process of picking them out and checking them out as much as he likes the toys themselves, and he understands that he has to return one set before he can get a new one. It makes perfect sense to him and his friends.

My local library has a pretty good tool library, too, and once a few months ago I was talking to my 6 year-old niece on the phone, and told her that I had to go return a chainsaw to the library. And she was like, "What?? Uncle Andy, how did you borrow a chainsaw from the library!?

I pointed out that libraries have lots of useful stuff you can borrow, and good ones have tools including chainsaws. She was pretty impressed -- because, c'mon, she's six, and it's a CHAINSAW -- but she loves her local library too, and now she knows that there's nothing you can't borrow from at a good library.

[–] stabby_cicada 1 points 10 months ago (2 children)

On the one hand, I love the idea and the images.

On the other hand, I don't like the term "library economy". What it describes is exactly what poor people, homeless people, people in rural villages and slums in poor countries, people in disadvantaged areas of the US, already do. Share what they have with community members in need because someday you'll need those community members to share with you.

"Library economy" sounds like a way to import that ethos of community to well off white liberals by using a term white liberals like (library) and avoiding any mention of poverty or race. It sounds pretentious and vaguely racist.

And frankly, it's also misleading - because well off white liberals think of libraries as places to borrow and return things. They don't think of libraries as distribution points for scarce resources. But that's exactly what your library economy would be - if there's one set of power tools and 50 people using the tool library, and you need those power tools, you have to hope one of the other 49 people isn't already using them. Or that one of the other 49 people hasn't been hit by a medical bill or some other emergency and sold the tools to pay for it. A community with one set of tools shared by 50 people obviously has fewer resources, albeit distributed more fairly, than a community where 40 people own their personal tools and 10 people go without.

Again, I love the concept of a community that shares limited resources. But the way you're pitching it hides the idea that the resources would be limited and the basic inescapable fact that a sustainable solarpunk future requires people to accept fewer resources and a lower standard of living.

[–] andrewrgross 2 points 10 months ago

sustainable solarpunk future requires people to accept fewer resources and a lower standard of living.

Citation needed.

[–] JacobCoffinWrites 2 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

It's an existing term, so using it mostly just helps skip the part where people explain to me that what I'm describing is a library economy. If you have a better term then I'll check it out, but I'm also not above trying to get buy-in from as many people as possible, including white liberals.

This is very much me trying to describe a more 'official' and widely-adopted version of the casual networks we relied on for most of my childhood, from knowing which guys working at the dump will look the other way while you dig something out of the scrap pile, to getting a new refrigerator whose chain of custody involves a rich person buying it, never using it, an uncle storing it in a lean-to for a year, and a whole network of conversations and luck, and a brother with a truck and gas money, to get it. There's a tremendous amount of luck and circumstance and uncertainty in those arrangements. If your job happens to throw away useful stuff, if you know someone who works in a rich guy's house, if you can borrow a truck and someone's time and the moment is right and someone else doesn't take the thing or get impatient and throw it away. Most of us never really stopped doing that stuff on some level, though I'm the weird one in the family because fixing stuff and shepherding it to a home, sequestering it in purpose is one of my main hobbies, in addition to how I live fairly cheaply. I fell in love with my current city and our Everything is Free group because it's so much more effective, inclusive, and wide-ranging than those networks of acquaintances we relied on before. When I ask around for something, or offer to give something away, I'm asking thousands of people, not dozens. And because the city has lots of white liberals who are happy to use the group, there's lots of good stuff there. It's a good start. But if you want to replace amazon with it, you have to be willing to trade time and convenience for the money and waste saved. The item you need might not show up for weeks or months, or it might not be quite a perfect fit, or you might find yourself hiking to the heights in the rain to get it because there's other people on the waitlist. I'm trying to describe something bigger and more organized and more reliable than even that.

And yeah, the library economy or whatever you want to call it won't be as convenient as a logistics titan which involves slavery and deforestation, which will fabricate a brand new whatever-it-is and deliver it to your door the next day. But it'll hopefully be big enough and thorough enough to get wide-ranging buy-in. The company my SO works for recently brought in a specialist to explain the concept of "do less with less" to their management. It struck me funny, that they were explaining such a basic concept, but for some reason, it's become kind of a thematic element, almost an aspirational goal in these postcards.