id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_6g3o4veek5gxrjlymbyyrnjgwu Kate Dohe Care, Code, and Digital Libraries: Embracing Critical Practice in Digital Library Communities 2019.0 .htm text/html 8197 565 47 Long held as the primary technological platforms to advance the most radical values of librarianship, the digital library landscape has become a re-enactment of local power dynamics that privilege wealth, whiteness, and masculinity at the expense of meaningful inclusive practice and care work. The contemporary digital library product landscape is currently reduced to commercial options owned by the same content owners and vendors (Schonfeld 2017b) that exuberantly pillage our collections budgets every year (MIT Libraries n.d.), and a handful of open source options with similar governance structures and substantial community dominance by a smattering of wealthy, historically white (Hathcock 2015) ARL member institutions. Open source digital library communities are largely driven by the priorities of technical staff like us at elite research libraries like ours, who frequently exist in a siloed, overwhelmingly white, predominantly cis-male micro-culture within their home libraries (Askey and Askey 2017), creating a masculinized environment that outsiders often negotiate through participation, emulation, or willful ignorance (Brandon, Ladenson, and Sattler 2018). ./cache/work_6g3o4veek5gxrjlymbyyrnjgwu.htm ./txt/work_6g3o4veek5gxrjlymbyyrnjgwu.txt