Library for the blind
A Library for the Blind or Blind Library is a library , which for the blind holds appropriate and visually impaired media for loan, mainly books and magazines in Braille (Braille by Louis Braille ) or with large print and audio media (records, audio cassettes, audio CDs or as a DAISY audio book ).
Users can have the media sent to them free of charge by the libraries for the blind thanks to the worldwide postage exemption for mail for the blind. Blind and visually impaired people pay a one-time registration fee or an annual membership fee at some libraries for the blind. Other libraries for the blind are free.
history
The first public library for the blind with a print shop, the German Central Library for the Blind in Leipzig (DZB) in Germany, was founded in Leipzig in 1894 . Audiobooks have also been produced here since 1956 .
The South German Hearing and Braille Library in Stuttgart , founded in 1957, had to be closed in 2004 for economic reasons.
There are other libraries for the blind in German-speaking countries in
- Zurich ( SBS Swiss Library for the Blind, Visually Impaired and Print Disabled , founded in 1904),
- Hamburg ( Norddeutsche Blindenhörbücherei e.V. (NBH), founded in 1905),
- Marburg (German Library for the Blind (DBB) of the German University for the Blind , founded in 1917),
- Bonn ( German Catholic Library for the Blind gGmbH (DKBB), founded in 1918),
- Münster ( Westdeutsche Blindenhörbücherei e.V. (WBH), founded in 1955, audio media only),
- Vienna ( audio library of the Austrian Association for the Blind and Visually Impaired , founded in 1957, audio media only),
- Berlin ( Berliner Blindenhörbücherei gGmbH, founded 1958),
- Munich ( Bayerische Blindenhörbücherei e.V. (BBH), founded 1958) and
- Alsbach-Hähnlein ( Blind Hearing Library of the Voice of Hope , founded 1964)
In September 2004 the media community for blind and visually impaired people e. V. (MedBuS) , an association of libraries for the blind in German-speaking countries, was founded.
Media for the blind
The first audiobooks for the blind were produced in the 1950s. The invention of the vinyl record made the new medium possible. It was only with the introduction of compact cassettes and later audio CDs that audio books became so “handy” that they could be sent in large numbers by post without damage in transit.
Web links
Media community for blind and visually impaired people e. V. (MediBuS)
Audio libraries
Germany
- Bavarian hearing library for the blind e. V. (BBH)
- Berliner Blindenhörbücherei gGmbH
- German Library for the Blind Marburg (DBB)
- German Catholic Library for the Blind (DKBB)
- German Central Library for the Blind in Leipzig (DZB)
- North German Blind Hearing Library e. V. (NBH)
- West German hearing library for the blind e. V. (WBH)
- Voice of Hope hearing library for the blind
Austria
Switzerland
Individual evidence
- ^ History of the Association - Association of the Blind and Visually Impaired Württemberg eV Accessed on May 25, 2020 .