Résumés
Abstract
.
Keywords:
- capitalism,
- extraction,
- extractivism,
- higher education,
- neoliberalism
Mots-clés :
- capitalisme,
- enseignement supérieur,
- extraction,
- extractivisme,
- néolibéralisme
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Parties annexes
Biographical notes
Maura Seale is the librarian for history at the University of Michigan, providing research and instructional support for students and faculty in the history department. Maura holds an MSI from the University of Michigan School of Information, an MA in American studies from the University of Minnesota, and a graduate certificate in digital public humanities from George Mason University. Her research focuses on critical librarianship, library pedagogy, political economy and labour in libraries, and race and gender in libraries. She is the co-editor, with Karen P. Nicholson, of The Politics of Theory in the Practice of Critical Librarianship (2018), and of Exploring Inclusive & Equitable Pedagogies: Creating Space for All Learners (2023) from ACRL Press. More information about her work is available at www.mauraseale.org
Nicole Pagowsky is Curriculum & Pedagogy Librarian and Academic Liaison Group Lead at The University of Arizona Libraries. Nicole has been adjunct faculty with the UArizona College of Information Science since 2015, and is a Ph.D. candidate in the College. Her current research is focused on perceptions and value of librarian labour, programmatic information literacy, and faculty instructional development. Nicole is guest editor of the College & Research Libraries special issue on one-shots (September 2022) and has edited two ACRL books: The Librarian Stereotype and the Critical Library Pedagogy Handbooks (2017 Ilene F. Rockman Publication of the Year Award). Find more information at nicolepagowsky.com.
Rafia Mirza is the Digital Scholarship Librarian at Southern Methodist University (SMU). Rafia holds an M.S.I. from the University of Michigan School of Information, and is working towards a Master's of Data Science at SMU. Her research focuses on digital humanities, library pedagogy, project planning and infrastructure in libraries, as well as race, gender and labor in librarianship. She has contributed chapters to Topographies of Whiteness: Mapping Whiteness in Library and Information Science (Library Juice Press, 2017) and Debates in the Digital Humanities 2023 (University of Minnesota Press, 2023). More information can be found at https://librarianrafia.github.io/about/.
Bibliography
- Junka-Aikio, Laura, and Catalina Cortes-Severino. 2017. “Cultural Studies of Extraction.” Cultural Studies 31 (2–3): 175–84. https://doi.org/10.1080/09502386.2017.1303397.
- Szeman, Imre, and Jennifer Wenzel. 2021. “What Do We Talk about When We Talk about Extractivism?” Textual Practice 35 (3): 505–23. https://doi.org/10.1080/0950236X.2021.1889829.