• Archive and Library

    Author(s):
    Marlene Manoff (see profile)
    Date:
    2018
    Group(s):
    TC Memory Studies, TM Libraries and Research, TM Literary and Cultural Theory
    Subject(s):
    Library education, Archives--Study and teaching, Digital humanities
    Item Type:
    Essay
    Tag(s):
    critlib, critical archival studies, Library and Archival Studies, Digital archives, Scholarly communication
    Permanent URL:
    http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/r14y-ge16
    Abstract:
    Archives and libraries operate within a complex web of social, political and economic forces. Digital technologies, globalization, the corporatization of the academy, and increasing commercial control of the scholarly record are just some of the myriad forces shaping their evolution. Libraries and archives in turn have shaped the production of knowledge, participating in transformations in scholarship, publishing and the nature of access to current and historical materials. Librarians and archivists increasingly recognize that they exist within institutional systems of power. Questioning long-held assumptions about library and archival neutrality and objectivity, they are working to expand access to previously marginalized materials, to theorize transformations in the nature of the historical record, to educate users about the forces shaping their access to information, to raise awareness about bias in information tools and systems, and to empower disenfranchised communities.
    Notes:
    An invited essay for the Oxford Encyclopedia of Literary Theory edited by John Frow - part of the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature. A submitted pre-copyedited manuscript, posted in accordance with Oxford's prepublication policy.
    Metadata:
    Status:
    Published
    Last Updated:
    4 years ago
    License:
    All Rights Reserved

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