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Narrative Expansions

Interpreting Decolonisation in Academic Libraries
Book Hero Magic crafted this summary to help describe this book. While it's new and still learning, it may not be perfect - your feedback is welcome! Summary
Narrative Expansions: Interpreting Decolonisation in Academic Libraries examines how academic libraries confront colonial legacies within the context of decolonising education and the university sector. The volume addresses the tensions in the concept of decolonisation, relating it to critical librarianship and social justice. Featuring international perspectives from Canada, the US, Kenya, and the UK, it discusses settler colonialism and post-colonial contexts.

Divided into two parts, the book explores the entrenched colonial structures within knowledge systems, the neo-liberal university, and the publishing industry. It presents theory alongside case studies on information literacy, collection management, inclusive spaces, LIS education, research methods, and knowledge productionโ€”viewed through critical pedagogy, information literacy, and Critical Race Theory. The impact of Whiteness among library staff is also addressed.

Serving as a vital resource, it supports academic librarians, educators, and researchers involved in Library and Information Science, education, and sociology.
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Format: Paperback / softback
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Book Hero Magic created this recommendation. While it's new and still learning, it may not be perfect - your feedback is welcome! IS THIS YOUR NEXT READ?

This book is especially suited to academic librarians, educational researchers, policy makers, and university faculty interested in decolonisation, social justice in education, and critical approaches within information science and higher education institutions.

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Libraries across all sectors are responding to the call to decolonise, critically examining their own historic legacies and practices and supporting institutional change. This book brings together current thinking and emerging practices around decolonising the library, providing conceptual frameworks, and describing emerging practices and their impact.

Book Hero Magic formatted this description to make it easier to read. While it's new and still learning, it may not be perfect - your feedback is welcome! Description

The demand to decolonise the curriculum has moved from a protest movement at the margins to the centre of many institutions, as reflected by its inclusion in policies and strategies and numerous initiatives in libraries and archives that have responded to the call, and are critically examining their own historic legacies and practices to support institutional and societal change.

Narrative Expansions: Interpreting Decolonisation in Academic Libraries explores the ways in which academic libraries are working to address the historic legacies of colonialism, in the context of decolonising the curriculum and the university. It acknowledges and explores the tensions and complexities around the use of the term decolonisation, how it relates to other social justice aims and approaches, including critical librarianship, and what makes this work specific to decolonisation.

The book is international in scope, and considers the contextual nature of decolonisation, with discussion of the impacts of settler colonialism, and post-colonial contexts with authors from Canada, the United States and Kenya, as well as universities in the UK.

Split into two sections, the book first addresses experiential contexts, discussing the environment in which the academic library is enmeshed: legacy knowledge systems, the neo-liberal university, the pervasive Whiteness of the higher education sector, the global publishing industry โ€“ how these structures are constitutive of coloniality and how they can be challenged. It then brings together theory and practice featuring case studies interpreting what it means to โ€˜decoloniseโ€™ in information literacy, collection management, inclusive spaces, LIS education, research methods and knowledge production through the lens of critical pedagogy, critical information literacy and Critical Race Theory (CRT). The book also addresses the impact and implications of the Whiteness of university library staffing.

Bringing together the theory and practice of an area of critical concern to the academy, this book is an important reference for academic librarians, educators and researchers in LIS, education and sociology.

Book Hero Magic summarised reviews for this book. While it's new and still learning, it may not be perfect - your feedback is welcome! HOW HAS THIS BEEN REVIEWED?

Midwest Book Review highly recommends this book as a unique and essential addition for personal and academic library collections in Library Science and curriculum studies.

Amy Lewontin, LSE Review of Books, advocates it as an essential resource for academic librarians and university faculty seeking to embed anti-racism in curricula and to promote diversity and inclusion in scholarly resources.

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Book Details

INFORMATION

ISBN: 9781783304974

Publisher: Facet Publishing

Format: Paperback / softback

Date Published: 09 December 2021

Country: United Kingdom

Imprint: Facet Publishing

Contributors:

  • Edited by Jess Crilly
  • Edited by Regina Everitt

Audience: Professional and scholarly

DIMENSIONS

Width: 156.0mm

Height: 234.0mm

Weight: 250g

Pages: 296

About the Author

Jess Crilly is an independent author and has worked mainly in academic libraries, most recently as Associate Director for Content and Discovery, Library Services, University of the Arts London, up to September 2020. Jessโ€™s interests include critical librarianship, the meaning of and possibilities for the decolonisation of knowledge, and the multiple contexts and uses of archives.

Regina Everitt is Assistant Chief Operating Officer (ACOO) and Director of Library, Archives and Learning Services at the University of East London. She began her professional career as a technical author/trainer working with computer companies that developed software for the manufacturing, pharmaceutical and financial sectors in the US and UK. After managing a small library at a university in West Africa as a volunteer with the United States Peace Corps, she transitioned into the HE sector, developing and managing libraries, social learning spaces and other learning resources. At University of East London, she is institution lead on excellence in customer service delivery.

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