Tunnel Vision and Blind Spots Reconsidered Part of Our Lives (2015) as a Test Case

Reference Type Journal Article
Year of Publication
2015
Contributors Author: Wayne A. Wiegand
Journal
Library Quarterly
Volume
85
Pagination
347-70
Language
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Abstract
In 1999 Library Quarterly published the author’s article “Tunnel Vision and Blind Spots: What the Past Tells Us about the Present; Reflections on the Twentieth-Century History of American Librarianship.” In it he argued that library and information studies (LIS) research and discourse suffered from a narrow perspective that limited its ability to discern a wider range of contributions and roles libraries played in their host communities. In this follow-up article, by harnessing conclusions emanating from research for his new book, “Part of Our Lives”: A People’s History of the American Public Library (2015) as a test case, the author argues that LIS discourse and research continue to manifest tunnel vision and blind spots that limit librarianship’s ability to more deeply understand its present circumstances and more prudently prepare for its future.