Substack has been making some questionable decisions lately, so I am trying out some new options for this newsletter. If you’re on LinkedIn, please consider subscribing to Circulation Status over there!
To be honest, as a part of my work, I do not give Big Topics a lot of thought. Not that I can’t, not that I think it’s wrong, not that I don’t think it’s important, but the everyday work of serving my community just keeps me too busy. Doing the podcast does help me focus on these things more often, so I am happy to dip into things here and there to +1 my Generalist status.
Cultural humility was one of those Big Topics that I hadn’t given a lot of thought to and is on my list of Things I Really Should Be Thinking More About. In Circulating Ideas, Episode 240, I chatted with the editors of Hopeful Visions, Practical Actions: Cultural Humility in Library Work, Sarah R. Kostelecky, Lori Townsend, and David A. Hurley, about what cultural humility is, the importance of self-reflection, mitigating power differentials, and why Venn diagrams are always the answer.
I should probably think more about Big Topics and less about How Cool And Useful Venn Diagrams are.
CI240 Show Notes
Hopeful Visions, Practical Actions: Cultural Humility in Library Work
LIS educators and students, library directors, managers, frontline employees, and those who work behind the scenes all share how they are taking action and creating change. Thoughtfully addressing DEI issues related to policies, services, and programs, this collection’s diverse chorus of voices will both enlighten and inspire.
Cultural humility offers a renewing and transformative framework for navigating interpersonal interactions in libraries, whether between patrons and staff or staff members with one another. It foregrounds a practice of critical self-reflection and commitment to recognizing and redressing structural inequities and problematic power imbalances. This collection, the first book-length treatment of this approach in libraries, gathers contributors from across the field to demonstrate how cultural humility can change the way we work and make lasting impacts on diversity, equity, and inclusion in libraries. This book's chapters explore such topics as
how Indigenous adages can be tools for reflection and guidance in developing cultural humility;
the experiences of two Black librarians who are using cultural humility to change the profession;
new perspectives on core concepts of customer service;
rethinking policies and practices in libraries both large and small;
using cultural humility in approaching collection development and creating resource guides;
what cultural humility can look like for a tribal librarian working in a tribal college library; and
reflecting on cultural humility itself and where it is going.
The Editors
Sarah R. Kostelecky is the Director of Digital Initiatives and Scholarly Communication (DISC) for University of New Mexico Libraries. Her research focuses on outreach efforts to underrepresented communities, diversity in academic libraries and library collections, and Native American language resources. Previously at UNM, Sarah has served as the Education Librarian and Access Services Librarian in the Indigenous Nations Library Program (INLP). She earned both her MA in Information Resources and Library Science and BA in Sociology from the University of Arizona. Prior to working at UNM Libraries, Sarah was the Library Director at the Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA) in Santa Fe, NM, the premiere educational institution for contemporary Native American arts and cultures. Along with David A. Hurley and Paulita Aguilar, she co-edited “Sharing Knowledge and Smashing Stereotypes: Representing Native American, First Nation, and Indigenous Realities in Library Collections,” a special double issue of the journal Collection Management. Sarah has enjoyed working in a variety of libraries including university, public, tribal college, and museum. She is a member of Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico.
Lori Townsend is the Learning Services Coordinator and Engineering Librarian for the University of New Mexico Libraries. Her research interests include threshold concepts and information literacy, academic librarians of color and cultural humility. Lori holds a BA in history from the University of New Mexico and an MLIS from San Jose State University. Before coming to UNM, she worked as the Electronic Collections Librarian at California State University, East Bay from 2005-2010. She is co-author, along with Amy R. Hofer and Silvia Lin Hanick, of the book Transforming Information Literacy Instruction: Threshold Concepts in Theory and Practice (Libraries Unlimited, 2018); she and Silvia Lin Hanick are Series Editors for the just-launched Libraries Unlimited Series on Teaching Information Literacy Today. Lori is a member of the Shoshone-Paiute Tribes of Duck Valley.
David A. Hurley is the Web and Discovery Librarian for the University Libraries. In addition to cultural humility, he writes and presents on search, reference services, and information literacy. He was previously the director of the Diné College libraries on the Navajo Nation, chief of the library development bureau at the New Mexico State Library, and branch and digital services manager for the public library of Albuquerque and Bernalillo County. With Sarah R. Kostelecky and Paulita Aguilar, David co-edited “Sharing Knowledge and Smashing Stereotypes: Representing Native American, First Nation, and Indigenous Realities in Library Collections,” a special double issue of the journal Collection Management.
Mentions
Hopeful Visions, Practical Actions: Cultural Humility in Library Work
News You Can Use—Cultural Humility in Practice [ALA Presentation]
“Interview with the Editors: Kostelecky, Townsend, and Hurley; Cultural Humility in Libraries” [LUCIDEA]
“Cultural Humility: Elements of Practice” [ALA Store blog]
Knowledge River [University of Arizona School of Information]
Knowledge River supports the education, recruitment, and retention of information professionals dedicated to serving the needs of BIPOC communities.
Steve Thomas is a public library manager in the suburbs of Atlanta. He has hosted the Circulating Ideas podcast since 2011, facilitating conversations with the innovative people and ideas inspiring libraries to grow and thrive in the 21st century.
Currently Reading: Red Team Blues by Cory Doctorow
Circulating Ideas facilitates conversations with the innovative people and ideas inspiring libraries to grow and thrive in the 21st century. Brought to you with support from listeners like you.