Grassroots Inquiry through Reading Groups in Academic Libraries

Authors

  • Elliott Kuecker University of Georgia
  • Emily McGinn Princeton University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21900/j.jloe.v3.957

Keywords:

reading, reading groups, working groups, academic libraries, literacy

Abstract

Reading groups organized within academic libraries offer an interdisciplinary/undisciplined space for academics to discuss scholarly readings without the typical expectations associated with reading within the academy. Unlike reading for coursework or in order to write, which positoins the reader as a suspicious critic, reading as a community interested in a shared topic of inquiry opens up new avenues for interpretation and collaboration. This article describes some history of reading groups, how they are related to libraries, and theories of reading that help explore why reading groups create a sense of grassroots inquiry. It also offers practical advice for those interested in creating academic reading groups in their library.

References

Bivens-Tatum, Wayne. 2011. Libraries and the Enlightenment. Los Angeles, CA: Litwin Press.

Britton, James. 1969. “Talking to Learn.” Language, the Learner, and the School: 79-115.

Cheon, Jung-Hwan. 2014. “The Development of Mass Intellectuality: Reading Circles and Socialist Culture in 1920s Korea.” East Asian History 39: 75-87.

The Care Collective (2020). The Care manifesto: The politics of interdependence.Brooklyn, NY: Verso Books.

Carlson, Anna, and Briony Walker. 2018. “Free Universities and Radical Reading Groups: Learning to Care in the Here and Now.” Journal of Media and Cultural Studies 32, no. 6: 782-749.

Elliott, Julie. 2007. “Academic Libraries and Extracurricular Reading Promotion.” Reference & User Services Quarterly 46 no. 3: 34-43.

Elliott, Julie. 2009. “Barriers to Extracurricular Reading Promotion in Academic Libraries.” Reference & User Services Quarterly 48 no. 4: 340-346.

Fister, Barbara. 2004. “Reading as a Contact Sport: Online Book Groups and the Social Dimensions of Reading.” Reference and User Services Quarterly 44 no. 4: 303-309.

Kaserman, Bonnie and Matthew W. Wilson, 2009. “On Not Wanting it to Count: Reading Together as Resistance.” Area 41 no. 1: 26-33.

Latour, Bruno. 2004. “Why has Critique Run out of Steam?” Critical Inquiry 30 no. 2: 225-248.

Long, Elizabeth. 2003. Book clubs: Women and the Uses of Reading in Everyday Life. Chicago: University of Chicago press.

Preer, Jean. 2010. “‘Wake Up and Read!’ Book Promotion and National Library Week, 1958,” Libraries & the Cultural Record 45 no. 1: 92-106.

Sedgwick, Eve. 2002. Touching Feeling: Affect, Pedagogy, Performativity.Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Stolorow, Robert D. 2014. “Heidegger, Mood and the Lived Body: The Ontical and the Ontological. Janus Head 13 no. 2: 5-11.

Traue, James Edward. 2007. “Reading as a Necessity of Life’ on the Tuapeka Goldfields in Nineteenth Century New Zealand.” Library History 23 no. 1: 41-48.

Wiegand, Wayne. 2015. The History of Modern Librarianship: Constructing the Heritage of Western Cultures. Santa Barbara, CA: Libraries Unlimited.

Wiegand, Wayne. 2016. Part of our lives: A People’s History of the American Public Library. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.

Wiener, Paul B. 1982. “Recreational Reading Services in Academic Libraries: An Overview,” Library Acquisitions: Practice and Theory 6: 59-70.

Wilste, Ed. 2011. “Doing Time in College: Student-prisoner Reading Groups and the Object(s) of Literary Study.” Critical Survey 23: 6-22.

Downloads

Published

2023-09-07