Main Body

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Reading List

If I had all the time in the world, and a gorgeous Victorian drawing room to read in while sipping tea, I would be able to complete all the readings below. Alas, there is never enough time, so I consider the articles and chapters below a series of wishlists. I will read and reflect upon as many as I am able to within the next 10-11 weeks within a caffeinated flurry.

Retrospective Note: Though not included on the lists below, during the DFW I also read selections from Toward What Justice?: Describing Diverse Dreams of Justice in Education (2018), edited by Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang and Topographies of Whiteness: Mapping Whiteness in Library and Information Science (2017), edited by Gina Schlesselman-Tarango. I’m of the opinion that Toward What Justice? should be required reading for any graduate student whose work intimately or loosely relates to the field of education.

 

PEDAGOGY, ACADEMIA, SPACE, & INTERSECTIONALITY 

  1. ACRL Selected Guidelines (2001-2019), http://www.ala.org/acrl/standards/alphabetical
  2. “All the Digital Humanists are White, All the Nerds Are Men, but Some of Us are Brave” (2017), Moya Z. Bailey
  3. “Beyond the Margins: Intersectionality and the Digital Humanities” (2015), Roopika Risam
  4. Consciousness-Raising: Critical Pedagogy and Practice for Social Change (2018) selections, Nilan Yu
  5. “Contesting Neoliberalism Through Critical Pedagogy, Intersectional Reflexivity, and Personal Narrative: Queer Tales of Academia” (2012), Richard G. Jones and Bernadette Marie Calafell
  6. Critical Library Instruction: Theories and Methods (2010) selections, ed. Maria T. Accardi, Emily Drabinski, and Alana Kumbier
  7. “Critical Pedagogy, Critical Conversations: Expanding Dialogue about Critical Library Instruction through the Lens of Composition and Rhetoric” (2016), Andrea Baer
  8. “Cyborgs in the Academic Library: A Cyberfeminist Approach to Information Literacy Instruction” (2014), Gina Schlesselman-Tarango
  9. Decolonising the University (2018) selections, ed. Gurminder K. Bhambra, Dalia Gebrial, and Kerem Nişancıoğlu
  10. “Destroy Your Classroom! Re-conceptualizing the Instructor/Student Model in Academic Libraries” (2015), Tiffany Baglier and Thomas Caswell
  11. Digital Humanities in the Library: Challenges and Opportunities for Subject Specialists (2015) selections, ed. Arianne Hartsell-Gundy, Laura Braunstein, and Liorah Golomb
  12. Digital Literacy Unpacked (2017) selections, ed. Katharine Reedy and Jo Parker
  13. “Ethnographic perspectives on student-centeredness in an academic library” (2016), Elizabeth G. Allan
  14. “Library Space: Its Role in Research” (2016), Lesley S.J. Farmer
  15. “Making a Third Space for Student Voices in Two Academic Libraries” (2015), James Elmborg, et al.
  16. “Missing Bodies: Troubling the Colonial Landscape of American Academia” (2011), Claudio Moreira and Marcelo Diversi
  17. “Space Assessment as a Venue for Defining the Academic Library” (2011), Danuta A. Nitecki

PODCASTING AND DIGITIAL STORYTELLING LITERATURE

  1. “Being Human Today: A Digital Storytelling Pedagogy for Transcontinental Border Crossing” (2016), Kristian Stewart and Daniela Gachago
  2. “Digital Storytelling: New Opportunities for Humanities Scholarship and Pedagogy” (2016), John F. Barber
  3. “Extending Readers Theatre: A Powerful and Purposeful Match With Podcasting” (2011), Sheri Vasinda and Julie Mcleod
  4. “Lend Me Your Ears: The Rise of the History Podcast in Australia” (2019), Honae H. Cuffe
  5. “Podcasting the Past: Africa Past and Present and (South) African History in the Digital Age” (2012), Peter Alegi
  6. “Podcasting for Social Justice: Exploring the Potential of Experiential and Transformative Teaching and Learning Through Social Work Podcasts” (2019), Ilyan Ferrer, et al.
  7. “The Power of Digital Storytelling as a Culturally Relevant Health Promotion Tool” (2016), Katherine J. Briant, et al.
  8. The Power of Storytelling: Digital Stories as a Health Promotion Tool in the Yakima Valley (2015), Amy K. Halter
  9. “Talking Women/Women Talking: The Feminist Potential of Podcasting for Modernist Studies” (2018), Séan Richardson and Heather Green

ACCESSIBILITY LITERATURE

  1. “A Glitch in the Tower: Academia, Disability, and Digital Humanities,” Elizabeth Ellecesor, from The Routledge Companion to Media Studies and Digital Humanities (2018)
  2. “All Technology Is Assistive: Six Design Rules on Disability,” Sara Hendren, in Making Things and Drawing Boundaries: Experiments in the Digital Humanities (2017)
  3. “Archive Experiences: A Vision for User-centered Design in the Digital Humanities,” Liza Potts in Rhetoric and the Digital Humanities (2015)
  4. “Disability, Universal Design, and the Digital Humanities,” George H. Williams from Debates in the Digital Humanities (2012)
  5. Disrupting the Digital Humanities (2018) selections, ed. Dorothy Kim and Jesse Stommel
  6. “The Effectiveness of Closed Caption Videos in Classrooms: Objective Versus Subjective Assessments” (2019), H. Jae
  7. “Mapping Access: Digital Humanities, Disability Justice, and Sociospatial Practice” (2018), Aimi Hamraie
  8. “Story Maps and Disability Studies: A Digital Blueprint for Teaching Community Engagement” (2018), Joseph M.M. Aldinger
  9. “Universal Design for Learning: A Collaborative Framework for Designing Inclusive Curriculum” (2010), Xiuwen Wu

 

 

 

 

 

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Academic Library Instruction Copyright © 2019 by rebwn is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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