Description |
1 online resource (ix, 264 pages) |
Contents |
Introduction / Karen P. Nicholson and Maura Seale -- In resistance to a capitalist past: emerging practices of critical librarianship / Lua Gregory and Shana Higgins -- "Ruthless criticism of all that exists": Marxism, technology, and library work / Sam Popowich -- Making the case for a sociocultural perspective on information literacy / Alison Hicks -- Critical systems librarianship / Simon Barron and Andrew Preater -- Disability at work: libraries, built to exclude / Jessica Schomberg -- Ordering things / Sarah J. Coysh, William Denton and Lisa Sloniowski -- Indigenous information literacy: nêhiyaw kinship enabling self-care in research / Jessie Loyer -- Envisioning a critical archival pedagogy / Michelle Caswell -- Reflections on running a CritLIS reading group / Penny Andrews, Elizabeth L. Chapman, Jessica Elmore, Dan Grace, Emily Nunn, and Sheila Webber -- Reflections on resistance, decolonization, and the historical trauma of libraries and academia / Nicola Andrews -- Critical librarianship as an academic pursuit / Ian Beilin -- Each according to their ability: zine librarians talking about their community / Violet Fox, Kelly McElroy, Jude Vachon and Kelly Wooten -- Quantitative researchers, critical librarians: potential allies in pursuit of a socially just praxis / Selinda Adelle Berg -- Interrogating the collective: #critlib and the problem of community / Nora Almeida |
Summary |
"Over the past fifteen years, librarians have increasingly looked to theory as a means to destablize normative discourses and practices with LIS, to engage in inclusive and non-authoritarian pedagogies, and to organize for social justice. "Critlib", short for "critical librarianship," is variously used to refer to a growing body of scholarship, an intellectual or activist movement within librarianship, an online community that occasionally organizes in-person meetings, and an informal Twitter discussion space active since 2014, identified by the #critlib hashtag. Critlib "aims to engage in discussion about critical perspectives on library practice" but it also seeks to bring 'socal justice principles into our work in libraries' (http://critlib.org/about/)."--Back cover |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 255-257) and index |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Libraries and society.
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Social justice -- Libraries
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Library science -- Social aspects
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Library science -- Philosophy
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Academic libraries.
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academic libraries (institutions)
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Academic libraries
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Libraries and society
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Library science -- Philosophy
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Library science -- Social aspects
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Indigenous research methodology.
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Indigenous research ethics.
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Indigenous pedagogy.
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Indigenous peoples -- Libraries -- Decolonization.
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Indigenous peoples -- Libraries -- Healing.
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First Nations -- Librarians.
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Māori -- Librarians.
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Māori -- Students -- Postsecondary.
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Nicholson, Karen P., editor
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Seale, Maura, editor.
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ISBN |
9781634000758 |
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1634000757 |
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