A Genealogy of Refusal : Walking away from crisis and scarcity narratives

Superhero Librarians

The Hero Narrative is nothing new in librarianship. Libraries are engaging in valuable and meaningful work as the sustainers of curated collections and knowledge that will be passed along to future generations. Yet the way generations of librarians uncomfortably wear the mantle of our benignant profession perpetuates a genre of hero narratives all its own. These are stories in which librarians as hero first responders step into the wake of natural disasters, sifting through toppled stacks after earthquakes, salvaging materials after floods, or are required to go in during a literal pandemic to provide access to content under the term "Hero."




It is a slippery professional slope from hero or rockstar librarian, to martyr librarian, to burn-out. A hero mentality that relies on a vocational identity of self-sacrifice may manifest in library staff endangering themselves and their communities when they should not be or when they cannot effectively say “No”.
These are the librarians with inadequate PPE working in libraries that remained open during a pandemic and risked their lives so unmasked patrons could have access to library materials, or who used their own cars and time to deliver books to quarantined students stepping out of pandemic isolation wards.


This mindset is not sustainable, especially when library staff find themselves thinking of their work as a matter of life and death (a notion reinforced and celebrated by other colleagues, administrators or local politicians).

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  1. Table of Contents Natalie K Meyers

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