The Coin of Love and Virtue: Academic Libraries and Value in a Global Pandemic

Authors

  • Maura Seale University of Michigan
  • Rafia Mirza Southern Methodist University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33137/cjal-rcbu.v6.34457

Keywords:

academic libraries, capitalism, critical theory, labour, political economy, value

Abstract

In September 2010, the Association of College and Research Libraries released The Value of Academic Libraries: A Comprehensive Research Review and Report. The spread of the novel coronavirus and the resulting global pandemic has raised questions about the concept of value in academic libraries. How is value attributed? How does value function? What does it mean to demonstrate or prove our value? We begin with an overview and analysis of ACRL’s Value of Academic Libraries Initiative. We then provide a description and timeline of the spread of COVID-19 and the reaction of both institutions of higher education, academic libraries, professional library organizations, and individual librarians. The pandemic has created a new category of workers - “essential workers” - who provide vital services, perform maintenance work, and labor to keep infrastructures intact. The role of carework and careworkers in the pandemic helps illuminate the situation of academic librarians within regimes of neoliberal austerity. Ultimately we argue that although the discourse of library value seeks to prove library value rationally and empirically, through a lot of quantitative data, capitalism, the economy, and value are fundamentally irrational. Academic library value must be claimed politically; misrecognizing the nature of the problem and relying on commonsense understandings of value and the economic, which is what the discourse of library value has done for the past decade, goes nowhere.

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Author Biographies

Maura Seale, University of Michigan

Maura Seale is the History Librarian at the University of Michigan. She edited, with Karen P. Nicholson, The Politics of Theory and the Practice of Critical Librarianship, which was published by Library Juice Press in March 2018. She has also written about critical librarianship, library pedagogy and information literacy, race and gender in librarianship, and the political economy of libraries. She welcomes comments @mauraseale on Twitter.

Rafia Mirza, Southern Methodist University

Rafia Mirza is a Humanities Librarian at Southern Methodist University. She writes about Digital Humanities, project planning, and race, gender, and labor in librarianship. Her writing has been published in a number of outlets, including Library Trends, Journal of Radical Librarianship, and College & Undergraduate Libraries. She can be found at @LibrarianRafia on Twitter.  

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Published

2020-12-18

How to Cite

Seale, Maura, and Rafia Mirza. 2020. “The Coin of Love and Virtue: Academic Libraries and Value in a Global Pandemic”. Canadian Journal of Academic Librarianship 6 (December):1-30. https://doi.org/10.33137/cjal-rcbu.v6.34457.

Issue

Section

Special Focus on Academic Libraries and the Irrational