Buch, Englisch, 304 Seiten
Histories, Context, and Reparative Approaches
Buch, Englisch, 304 Seiten
ISBN: 978-1-78330-726-5
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- gain an understanding of the theoretical underpinning for the actions that create our history and be challenged to reconsider their perspectives;
- learn about the important role of the library catalog in real-world EDISJ initiatives through examples ranging from accessibility metadata and gendered information to inclusive comics cataloging and revising LC call numbers for Black people and Indigenous people;
- discover more than a dozen case studies drawn from a variety of contexts including archives, academic and public libraries, and research institutions; and
- see ways to incorporate these ideas into their own work, with a variety of sample policies, "how to" documents, and other helpful tools provided in the text.
Zielgruppe
Professional Reference
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction Part I. History & Theory 1. Ways of Knowing: The Worlds Words Create 2. This Is the Work: A Short History of the Long Tradition of Inclusive Cataloging Critiquing and Action 3. Describing Themselves: Diverse Library Cataloging, 1930-1970 4. A (Very) Select History of Inclusive Cataloging 5. Did Libraries "Change the Subject"? What Happened, What Didn't and What's Ahead 6. Accessibility Metadata and Library Catalogs: Current Outlook and Initiatives 7. Gendered Information and the Program for Cooperative Cataloging 8. From "Afrofuturist comics" to "Zombies in comics": Inclusive Comics Cataloging from A to Z 9. Critical Cataloging Beyond the Core Part II. Case Studies 10. Words Matter: Creating a Harmful Content Statement for Your Public Library 11. Coming to Terms: Enacting Reparative Change in and Urban Public Library OPAC 12. Enhancing Subject Access to LGBTQ+ Materials: It's Not Just About the (Rainbow) Crosswalk 13. Access, Identity, and Context: Inclusive Cataloging in the Hayes Research Library at Perkins School for the Blind 14. Reparative Description for Collection-Level Archival Records: A Case Study 15. Reparative Cataloging as a Solo Librarian: a Special Library Case Study 16. Representing Gender-Diverse Creators in Indiana University Cook Music Library's Online Catalogs 17. Promoting Inclusivity and Cultural Humility Through Cataloging: A Digitization Project 18. A Place to Think About Inclusive Cataloging 19. Retrospective Cataloging Project for Respectful and Inclusive Metadata: Revising LC Call Numbers for Black People 20. The Trans* Collections Project: Conducting a Diversity Audit to Assess, Grow, and Make a Collection More Discoverable 21. "It Isn't Part of Our Language": Engaging Indigenous Peoples to Facilitate Self-Naming in Subject Headings 22. Out of Many, One: A Unified Approach to Inclusive Description at Clemson University 23. Subject Heading Enhancement: A Reparative and Inclusive Practice at the University of Virginia Library 24. Canceling "Primitive": A Subject Heading Revision Fifty Years in the Making 25. One Step at a Time: Using Targeted Pilot Projects to Achieve Meaningful and Scalable Metadata Reparation 26. Automating Inclusivity: A Case Study Detailing how to Automate Inclusive Cataloging in Alma 27. Inclusive Cataloging in an Academic Library Consortium 28. Reparative Cataloging at The Washington Research Library Consortium: Moving Ideas into Action in the Shared Environment About the Editors