ICADL 2007 - LNCS 4822
   

Multicultural and Globalized Digital Libraries: Digitizing and Empowering the “Other”

(Extended Abstract)

Clara M. Chu

UCLA Department of Information Studies, 210 GSE&IS Building, Box 951520, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1520
cchu@ucla.edu

Abstract. Our multicultural societies in a globalized context offer the opportunity to forge new frontiers in digital libraries. Focusing on the cultural diversity of the Asian region, this paper examines what should be digitized, who should be involved in the digitization efforts, and what access issues need to be considered. More specifically, documenting the experiences of the Asian diaspora and ethnic minorities will be discussed, engaging critical theories and multicultural scholarship. By problematizing the cultural production of digital libraries as an act of nostalgia, of inclusion and exclusion, and of racial, social and sexual differentiation, we can unpack the role that digital libraries play in the creation of communities in our imaginary and in the perception of space and place from those objects we select to digitize. The paper concludes with a call for decentering digital libraries and digitizing the “Other” as an act of empowerment and representation.

Keywords: Multicultural digital library, Asian diaspora, minority communities, empowerment

LNCS 4822, p. 1 ff.

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