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001 | 1314 | ||
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_a9781634000277 _bbr. |
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090 | _a1314 | ||
099 | _tLIVR | ||
100 | _a20211027d2017 k||y0frey50 ba | ||
101 | _aeng | ||
105 | _ay|||acd|001cy | ||
106 | _ar | ||
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_aFeminists Among Us _bTexte imprimé _eResistance and Advocacy in Library Leadership _fShirley, Lew _fBaharak, Yousefi _gMaura A., Smale _gLisa, Richmond _gShana, Higgins _gRachel, Fleming _gKelly, McBride _gDale, Askey _gJennifer, Askey _gApril M., Hathcock _gJennifer, Vinopal _gTara, Robertson |
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_aSacramento, CA _bPO Box 188784 Sacramento, CA 95818 _cLibrary Juice Press _d2017 |
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215 | _a196 p. | ||
225 |
_aGender and Sexuality in Information Studies _fEmily, Drabinski _v9 |
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330 | _aFeminists Among Us: Resistance and Advocacy in Library Leadership makes explicit the ways in which a grounding in feminist theory and practice impacts the work of library administrators who identify as feminists. Recent scholarship by LIS researchers and practitioners on the intersections of gender with sexuality, race, class, and other social categories within libraries and other information environments have highlighted the need and desire of this community to engage with these concepts both in theory and praxis. Feminists Among Us adds to this conversation by focusing on a subset of feminist LIS professionals and researchers in leadership roles who engage critically with both management work and librarianship. By collecting these often implicit professional acts, interactions, and dynamics and naming them as explicitly feminist, these accounts both document aspects of an existing community of practice as well as invite fellow feminists, advocates, and resisters to consider library leadership as a career path. | ||
610 | _aféminisme | ||
610 | _apratiques | ||
610 | _abibliothécaires | ||
610 | _abibliothèques | ||
801 |
_aFR _b595126101 _cYYYYMMDD _gAFNOR |