“The changing same” of whiteness in the US LIS academy: a cathartic testimonial from BIPOC faculty scholars

Vanessa Irvin, Kafi D. Kumasi, Kehinde Akinola
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Abstract

PurposeThere is little to no empirical research on the phenomenon of ways in which the racism of whiteness transpires within the faculties and classrooms of US-based ALA-accredited library and information science (LIS) education programs. We do have scholars publishing meaningful work exploring diversity-equity-inclusion topics and initiatives to evolve the LIS discourse on these issues (Honma, 2005; Chancellor, 2019; De LaRosa et al., 2021; Gibson, 2019; Mehra et al., 2023; Colón-Aguirre et al., 2022; Hands, 2022). This research substantiates the conceptual research that exists by empirically exposing the ways in which the racism of whiteness functions at the interpersonal level of work culture in LIS programs (i.e. the academy) in the US.Design/methodology/approachAdapting Baima and Sude’s (2020) modified Delphi Method, a focus group of 13 BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color) library and information science faculty members in the United States were recruited to participate in a one-time 60-min virtual Zoom session. Participants were engaged in three iterative rounds of reflective inquiry to reach a consensus of experience. The study design was embedded with critical race theory-based (CRT) ethnographic methods such as testimony (counterstorytelling), collective affirmation (shared narratives), and silence.FindingsBIPOC LIS faculty (tenure-track and tenured) have similar ideas about whiteness and how it is operationalized as micro- and macro-aggressions in the LIS academic workplace, most significantly inside the classroom. The experience of whiteness was prevalent among all study participants in two areas: workplace meetings with faculty colleagues and classroom sessions (face-to-face and online) with students.Originality/valueThe findings offer empirical evidence to support the prolific conceptual literature in LIS discourse concerning ways in which critical race theory (CRT) interrogates LIS’s socio-professional injustices and inequities (e.g. Gibson et al., 2018; Stauffer, 2020; Leung and Lopez-McKnight, 2021; Jennings and Kinzer, 2022; Snow and Dunbar, 2022). There remains a dearth of empirical research that reports how whiteness is reproduced in the practices, knowledge, and resources that make up the ethos of the LIS faculty meeting and classroom. Documenting the testimonies of BIPOC LIS faculty solidifies the existence of whiteness as a toxic reality in the LIS academy.
美国 LIS 学院中白人的 "不变":来自 BIPOC 教员学者的宣泄证词
目的:在美国图书馆协会(ALA)认证的图书馆与信息科学(LIS)教育项目中,几乎没有关于白人种族主义如何在学院和课堂中传播这一现象的实证研究。我们确实有学者发表了有意义的作品,探讨了多样性-平等-包容的主题和倡议,以发展图书馆与信息科学关于这些问题的讨论(Honma,2005;Chancellor,2019;De LaRosa 等人,2021;Gibson,2019;Mehra 等人,2023;Colón-Aguirre 等人,2022;Hands,2022)。本研究通过实证揭示白人种族主义在美国 LIS 项目(即学术界)工作文化的人际层面上发挥作用的方式,证实了现有的概念性研究。设计/方法/途径采用 Baima 和 Sude(2020 年)修改过的德尔菲法,在美国招募了 13 名 BIPOC(黑人、土著人和有色人种)图书馆和信息科学教师组成焦点小组,参加一次性 60 分钟的虚拟 Zoom 会议。与会者进行了三轮反复的反思探究,以达成经验共识。研究设计采用了基于批判性种族理论(CRT)的人种学方法,如证词(反叙事)、集体肯定(共享叙事)和沉默。研究结果BIPOC LIS教师(终身教职和终身教职)对白人性有相似的看法,以及白人性如何在LIS学术工作场所,特别是在教室内,被操作为微观和宏观侵害。研究结果提供了实证证据,以支持LIS论述中大量的概念性文献,这些文献涉及批判性种族理论(CRT)如何质疑LIS的社会职业不公正和不平等(如Gibson et al、2018; Stauffer, 2020; Leung and Lopez-McKnight, 2021; Jennings and Kinzer, 2022; Snow and Dunbar, 2022)。目前仍然缺乏实证研究来报告白人是如何在实践、知识和资源中再现的,而这些又构成了 LIS 教师会议和课堂的精神。记录BIPOC LIS教职员工的证词巩固了白人作为LIS学术界有毒现实的存在。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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