After Disruption

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A01=Trevor Owens
Archival theory
Author_Trevor Owens
Category=GLC
Category=GLM
Category=GLZ
Collection development
Collections management
Cultural criticism
Data driven decision making
Digital age
Digital History
digital infrastructure
Disability justice
Disruptive innovation
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Ethic of care
Feminist philosophy
Future of Archives
Future of Libraries
Future of Museums
History of Technology
Hustle culture
Information science
Maintenance theory
memory institutions
memory workers
Public History
Science and Technology Studies
Settler colonialism
startup
tech sector

Product details

  • ISBN 9780472056675
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 May 2024
  • Publisher: The University of Michigan Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The digital age is burning out our most precious resources and the future of the past is at stake. In After Disruption: A Future for Cultural Memory, Trevor Owens warns that our institutions of cultural memory—libraries, archives, museums, humanities departments, research institutes, and more—have been “disrupted,” and largely not for the better. He calls for memory workers and memory institutions to take back control of envisioning the future of memory from management consultants and tech sector evangelists.

After Disruption posits that we are no longer planning for a digital future, but instead living in a digital present. In this context, Owens asks how we plan for and develop a more just, sustainable, and healthy future for cultural memory. The first half of the book draws on critical scholarship on the history of technology and business to document and expose the sources of tech startup ideologies and their pernicious results, revealing that we need powerful and compelling counter frameworks and values to replace these ideologies. The second half of the book makes the case for the centrality of maintenance, care, and repair as interrelated frameworks to build a better future in which libraries, archives, and museums can thrive as sites of belonging and connection through collections.

Trevor Owens is a Public Historian in Residence at American University, a Lecturer for the University of Maryland’s College of Information, and the Director of Digital Services at The Library of Congress.

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