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Critical Design in Librarianship: Visual and Narrative Exploration for Critical Praxis
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Critical Design in Librarianship: Visual and Narrative Exploration for Critical Praxis

Shannon Marie Robinson
The Library quarterly (Chicago), v 89(4), pp 348-361
01 Oct 2019
url
https://doi.org/10.1086/704965View
Published, Version of Record (VoR)CC BY V4.0 Open

Abstract

Information Science & Library Science Science & Technology Technology
In a politically charged social climate, many disciplines are inwardly grappling with historic ideologies and systems of oppression. In information science, critical librarianship seeks to disrupt normative approaches to library work by confronting these ideologies and systems, empowering both library workers and users to understand how these structures affect access and dissemination of information. In industrial design, critical design challenges the status quo by posing troublesome design problems that encourage reflection and discourse. Design works that fall under this category are reactions against consumerism, systemic biases, and heedless scientific and technological development. In librarianship, critical design may be employed to help us explore current paradigms and approaches to library spaces, services, and technologies, as well as to uncover assumptions about what a library is and what a librarian does. Prototypes and narratives derived from critical design can make visible the normative constructions and problems heartedly debated in librarianship.

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Web of Science research areas
Information Science & Library Science
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