Comics and Critical Librarianship: Reframing the Narrative in Academic Libraries

Though it is still not uncommon to hear the question "Comics? In libraries?!", comics collections have existed in academic institutions for over fifty years. Libraries have taken a variety of approaches to address differing philosophies and needs for their collections, but discourse has typically focused on the practical concerns of management and organization, considering the best ways to collect, catalog, shelve, and share comic books and trades, graphic novels, and more.

As a growing body of practice and scholarship, critical librarianship provides essential perspectives on the power structures, systems, and social justice concerns within libraries. This edited work considers comics librarianship through the lens of critical librarianship, focusing on work done in and around the academic library. While questions like "where do we buy comics?" and "how do we house them?" seem sufficiently addressed, such questions of collection management and organization, teaching, and outreach often lack a critical perspective. How and why should comics support and challenge research collections? In what ways can comics unsettle some of our traditional considerations of teaching and outreach? Furthermore, how does our language of organization and classification serve to marginalize or canonize comics works? And what might be revealed by post-colonial, feminist, or critical race readings of our practices?

Whether a seasoned comics librarian or a comics fan with a budding interest in the field, readers will find that Reframing the Narrative provides a holistic consideration of comics librarianship practices with a critical edge. Presented through case studies, original research and essays, and personal reflection, the book engages with topics from collection and cataloging to teaching and outreach, with contributors representing academic libraries and academic archival collections of varying sizes and populations across the United States and Canada.

Olivia Piepmeier (she/her) is the Arts & Humanities Librarian at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. Her BA is in Art History and English from the University of North Carolina Greensboro and she attended the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill for her MSLS. She built a strong graphic novel collection in her last position at Greensboro College and taught a for-credit course for two semesters on how to read and find comics with a feminist pedagogy.

Stephanie Grimm (she/her) is the Art and Art History Librarian at George Mason University in Fairfax, VA. She holds a BFA in Illustration and earned her MSI from the University of Michigan, where she developed a dedicated minicomics collection within the university libraries. She has worked with comics and illustration students at both art & design schools and research universities, and is a proponent of critical librarianship and literacy for artists and design students.

1131400754
Comics and Critical Librarianship: Reframing the Narrative in Academic Libraries

Though it is still not uncommon to hear the question "Comics? In libraries?!", comics collections have existed in academic institutions for over fifty years. Libraries have taken a variety of approaches to address differing philosophies and needs for their collections, but discourse has typically focused on the practical concerns of management and organization, considering the best ways to collect, catalog, shelve, and share comic books and trades, graphic novels, and more.

As a growing body of practice and scholarship, critical librarianship provides essential perspectives on the power structures, systems, and social justice concerns within libraries. This edited work considers comics librarianship through the lens of critical librarianship, focusing on work done in and around the academic library. While questions like "where do we buy comics?" and "how do we house them?" seem sufficiently addressed, such questions of collection management and organization, teaching, and outreach often lack a critical perspective. How and why should comics support and challenge research collections? In what ways can comics unsettle some of our traditional considerations of teaching and outreach? Furthermore, how does our language of organization and classification serve to marginalize or canonize comics works? And what might be revealed by post-colonial, feminist, or critical race readings of our practices?

Whether a seasoned comics librarian or a comics fan with a budding interest in the field, readers will find that Reframing the Narrative provides a holistic consideration of comics librarianship practices with a critical edge. Presented through case studies, original research and essays, and personal reflection, the book engages with topics from collection and cataloging to teaching and outreach, with contributors representing academic libraries and academic archival collections of varying sizes and populations across the United States and Canada.

Olivia Piepmeier (she/her) is the Arts & Humanities Librarian at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. Her BA is in Art History and English from the University of North Carolina Greensboro and she attended the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill for her MSLS. She built a strong graphic novel collection in her last position at Greensboro College and taught a for-credit course for two semesters on how to read and find comics with a feminist pedagogy.

Stephanie Grimm (she/her) is the Art and Art History Librarian at George Mason University in Fairfax, VA. She holds a BFA in Illustration and earned her MSI from the University of Michigan, where she developed a dedicated minicomics collection within the university libraries. She has worked with comics and illustration students at both art & design schools and research universities, and is a proponent of critical librarianship and literacy for artists and design students.

65.0 In Stock
Comics and Critical Librarianship: Reframing the Narrative in Academic Libraries

Comics and Critical Librarianship: Reframing the Narrative in Academic Libraries

Comics and Critical Librarianship: Reframing the Narrative in Academic Libraries

Comics and Critical Librarianship: Reframing the Narrative in Academic Libraries

Paperback

$65.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    In stock. Ships in 1-2 days.
  • PICK UP IN STORE

    Your local store may have stock of this item.

Related collections and offers


Overview

Though it is still not uncommon to hear the question "Comics? In libraries?!", comics collections have existed in academic institutions for over fifty years. Libraries have taken a variety of approaches to address differing philosophies and needs for their collections, but discourse has typically focused on the practical concerns of management and organization, considering the best ways to collect, catalog, shelve, and share comic books and trades, graphic novels, and more.

As a growing body of practice and scholarship, critical librarianship provides essential perspectives on the power structures, systems, and social justice concerns within libraries. This edited work considers comics librarianship through the lens of critical librarianship, focusing on work done in and around the academic library. While questions like "where do we buy comics?" and "how do we house them?" seem sufficiently addressed, such questions of collection management and organization, teaching, and outreach often lack a critical perspective. How and why should comics support and challenge research collections? In what ways can comics unsettle some of our traditional considerations of teaching and outreach? Furthermore, how does our language of organization and classification serve to marginalize or canonize comics works? And what might be revealed by post-colonial, feminist, or critical race readings of our practices?

Whether a seasoned comics librarian or a comics fan with a budding interest in the field, readers will find that Reframing the Narrative provides a holistic consideration of comics librarianship practices with a critical edge. Presented through case studies, original research and essays, and personal reflection, the book engages with topics from collection and cataloging to teaching and outreach, with contributors representing academic libraries and academic archival collections of varying sizes and populations across the United States and Canada.

Olivia Piepmeier (she/her) is the Arts & Humanities Librarian at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. Her BA is in Art History and English from the University of North Carolina Greensboro and she attended the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill for her MSLS. She built a strong graphic novel collection in her last position at Greensboro College and taught a for-credit course for two semesters on how to read and find comics with a feminist pedagogy.

Stephanie Grimm (she/her) is the Art and Art History Librarian at George Mason University in Fairfax, VA. She holds a BFA in Illustration and earned her MSI from the University of Michigan, where she developed a dedicated minicomics collection within the university libraries. She has worked with comics and illustration students at both art & design schools and research universities, and is a proponent of critical librarianship and literacy for artists and design students.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781634000802
Publisher: Library Juice Press
Publication date: 05/01/2019
Pages: 388
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 10.00(h) x 0.80(d)

Table of Contents



Acknowledgements

Introduction

The Basics

1. Beyond Representation: Addressing the Role of Empathy through Diversity in Graphic Narratives

Kamaria Hatcher

2. The Work of Critical Sequential Art Selection in Academic Libraries

Elliott Kuecker and Brad Hawley

Collecting

3. Making Use of the White Space: The Mazinbiige Indigenous Graphic Novel Collection at the University of Manitoba

Camille Callison, Niigaanwewidam Sinclair, and Greg Bak

4. Black to the Future: A Librarian’s Guide to Building a Afrofuturist Comics and Graphic Novels Collection

Kai Alexis Smith and Aisha Conner-Gaten

5. Challenging “Stereotypes and Fixity”: African American Comic Books in the Academic Archive

Brian Flota

6. Building a South Asian Comics Collection

Mara L. Thacker

7. Advocating for Diversity: Collecting Comics to Reflect Our Students

Breanne Crumpton, Michelle Mitchell, Alva Jones Jr., and Jenay Solomon

8. Comics in Special Collections: Purposeful Collection Development for Promoting Inclusive History

Caitlin McGurk and Jenny E. Robb

Organizing

9. Apocalyptic Comics, Women Detectives, and the Many Faces of Batgirl: Creating More Inclusive Comic Records through Flexible Cataloging Practices

Liz Adams and Rich Murray

10. Specter of Censorship: Comics in Academic Library Leisure Reading Collections

Andrew Wang

Teaching

11. The Extraordinary Result of Doing Something Ordinary

Kelly McElroy

12. Visualizing Arguments: Constructing Comics to Unpack Scholarly Texts

Samantha Kirk and Patricia Guardiola

13. Comics as Social Movement Primary Sources: The Consciousness-Raising Comics of the Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste

David Woken

14. The Value of Nonfiction Comics for Critical Information Literacy Instruction

Carly Diab

15. Excavating Visual Texts: Information Literacy, Critical Thinking, and the Graphic Novel in the Crime Fiction Classroom

Susanne F. Paterson and Carolyn White Gamtso

Reaching

16. Framing a Narrative: Critical Use of Comics in Library Exhibitions and Programs

Gerald Natal and Jennifer Martinez Wormser

17. Comics in Clinic

Kathryn M. Houk, Michelle P. Green, Matthew Noe, and Ariel Pomputius

18. Feminist Curating with Our Comics, Ourselves

Jan Descartes and Monica M. Johnson

19. Minicomics Workshops and Comic Arts Fairs to Empower Our Communities

Lindsay Gibb

Glossary

Author Bios

Index

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews