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Epistemicide and Anti-Blackness in Libraries, Archives, and Museums: Working Toward Equity Through Epistemic Justice Practices

Beth J. H. Patin (Syracuse University School of Information Studies USA)
Melissa Smith (Syracuse University School of Information Studies, USA)
Tyler Youngman (Syracuse University School of Information Studies, USA)
Jieun Yeon (Syracuse University School of Information Studies, USA)
Jeanne Kambara (Syracuse University School of Information Studies, USA)

Antiracist Library and Information Science: Racial Justice and Community

ISBN: 978-1-80262-100-6, eISBN: 978-1-80262-099-3

Publication date: 21 March 2023

Abstract

In Virginia, former Gov. L. Douglas Wilder accused the state’s library agency of racism for “its slow pace in processing and publicly presenting records from his tenure as the nation’s first elected Black governor” (Associated Press, 2020). The State Librarian responded that this was just a lapse in protocols and framed it as a budget issue and staff turnover. However, “Library of Virginia has been processing papers from his gubernatorial successors before finishing work on his” (Associated Press, 2020). Recently, the Alabama State Department of Archives and History acknowledged their participation in systemic racism, epistemicide, and their history of privileging White voices over those of Alabama African-Americans.

Epistemicide is the killing, silencing, annihilation, or devaluing of a way of knowing (Patin, Sebastian, Yeon, & Bertolini, 2020). Conceptualization and analytic application of epistemicide has an established tradition in a number of social science fields, but information scientists have only recently acknowledged epistemicide (Oliphant, 2021; Patin et al., 2020; Patin, Sebastian, Yeon, Bertolini, & Grimm, 2021). Building from our recent identification of the existence of epistemicide within the IS field (Patin et al., 2020), this work challenges the information field to become an epistemologically just space working to correct the systemic silencing of certain ways of knowing.

This chapter examines the four types of epistemic injustices—testimonial, hermeneutical, participatory, and curricular—occurring within libraries and archives and argues for a path forward to address these injustices within our programs, services, and curricula. It looks to digital humanities and to reevaluations of professional standards and LIS education to stop epistemicide and its harms. This chapter demonstrates how to affirm the power and experience of Black lives and highlight their experiences through the careful acquisition, collection, documentation, and publishing of relevant historical materials. Addressing epistemicide is critical for information professionals because we task ourselves with handling knowledge from every field. There has to be a reckoning before the paradigm can truly shift; if there is no acknowledgment of injustice, there is no room for justice.

Keywords

Citation

Patin, B.J.H., Smith, M., Youngman, T., Yeon, J. and Kambara, J. (2023), "Epistemicide and Anti-Blackness in Libraries, Archives, and Museums: Working Toward Equity Through Epistemic Justice Practices", Black, K. and Mehra, B. (Ed.) Antiracist Library and Information Science: Racial Justice and Community (Advances in Librarianship, Vol. 52), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 15-34. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0065-283020230000052004

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023 Beth J. H. Patin, Melissa Smith, Tyler Youngman, Jieun Yeon and Jeanne Kambara