反乌托邦时代的响应式管理和图书馆倡导:利用民权运动和1984年的信息来加强图书馆

L. Hunter, Sarah A. Buchanan
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引用次数: 1

摘要

作者提出的问题是,图书馆如何在疫情期间为自己和那些最需要图书馆的人辩护,并评估作者如何适应疫情消退后以新的方式帮助服务不足和代表性不足的人群的未来。设计/方法/方法作者利用疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)和其他来源目前提供的数据,先前关于图书馆项目和宣传的问题分析,以及一些反乌托邦小说的教训,阐述了冠状病毒对图书馆现在和未来的政治和社会影响。由于2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行关闭了世界各地的实体图书馆建筑,迫使图书馆重新开放的速度极其缓慢,并摧毁了图书馆项目,现在人们开始讨论图书馆将如何克服这一巨大打击。最需要图书馆信息的代表性不足的人群(即无家可归者、印第安人、黑人和西班牙裔人民等)正不成比例地受到疫情及其刚刚开始产生影响的后果的影响。原创性/价值本文以美国历史,特别是民权运动和乔治·奥威尔的反乌托邦小说《1984》为背景,提出了一种观点。目前,关于图书馆将会发生什么的讨论是有限的,但随着图书馆(以及世界上其他地方)试图在前所未有的情况下前进,希望会越来越多。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Responsive stewardship and library advocacy in dystopian times: using information from the Civil Rights Movement and 1984 to strengthen libraries
PurposeThe authors ask the question of how libraries can advocate for themselves and for those who most need the library during the pandemic, and evaluate how the authors adapt to a future of helping underserved and underrepresented populations in new ways after it subsides.Design/methodology/approachUsing data currently being provided by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and other sources, prior issue analyses dealing with library programs and advocacy, and lessons from a few dystopian novels, the authors lay out the political and social implications of the coronavirus on libraries now and in the future.FindingsBecause the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic shut down physical library buildings everywhere, forcing extremely slow re-openings and decimating library programs, conversation is building now on how libraries will overcome its massive blow. Underrepresented populations who most need library information (namely, the homeless, Native Americans, Black and Hispanic peoples among others) are suffering disproportionately from the pandemic and its aftereffects that are just beginning to reverberate.Originality/valueThis paper presents a viewpoint backed by lessons from American history, specifically the Civil Rights Movement, and the dystopian novel 1984 by George Orwell. Currently, the conversations around what will happen to libraries are limited, but will hopefully grow as libraries (and the rest of the world) attempt to move forward in an unprecedented situation.
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