Abstract
The work of digital humanists and librarians is often invisible to the larger
communities in which they work, particularly in academia. This opinion essay by
three librarian-scholar-digital practitioners explores invisible work and life
on the hyphen — between the academy and the library and between the human and
the digital. In this essay, we illustrate how librarian-scholar-digital
practitioners can feel overworked and underappreciated, working in and with
multiple fields and communities who have different and sometimes competing
methodologies. Through two examples, we look at how living on the hyphen takes
its toll for librarian-scholar-digital practitioners. We end our essay by
detailing steps faculty and administration can take to help us solve the problem
and realize the promise of digital humanities.
We are full-time librarians, fully-fledged scholars and digital humanists. As such,
we split our work between different yet often intersecting areas. We answer to the
distinct professional worlds of the academy and the library, the human and the
digital. Or, to borrow the phrase of scholar Gustavo Pérez Firmat, we live on the
hyphen. As hyphenated scholars, much of our work is invisible to either (or both)
professional worlds.
Our situation is not unique. Many digital humanists constantly experience the
difficulties of having to perform interdisciplinary work. As Bethany Nowviskie
explains: “In a field whose native interdisciplinarity verges on
inter-professionalism, full-time, long-term digital humanities staff already
struggle against the pressure to become jacks of all trades and masters of
none.”
[
Nowviskie 2016] Similarly, in 2012, Matthew Kirschenbaum argued the
term digital humanities as
tactical because “digital humanities emerges as a rare vector for jujitsu, simultaneously serving
to position the humanities at the very forefront of certain value-laden agendas
[...] while at the same time allowing for various forms of intra-institutional
mobility as new courses are approved, new colleagues are hired, new resources
are allotted, and old resources are reallocated.”
[
Kirschenbaum 2012, 415–16] As Roopika Risam notes more recently:
“This is the promise of digital humanities: critical,
generous digital scholarship that has the potential to cross institutional
sectors; to overcome the divides between archive, library, university, and
museum; and create networked publics.”
[
Risam 2019, 142] Our question is
how to realize this
promise.
In 2017, the Digital Library Federation launched a working group on labor in digital
libraries, and in 2018 they released their research agenda in which they discuss
research on digital library labor conditions and suggest projects for further
research. Also in 2018, Christina Boyles, Anne Cong-Huyen, Carrie Johnston, Jim
McGrath, and Amanda Phillips issued a call to “make forms of
digital labor and the agents behind this labor more visible ”[
Boyles 2018, 693] in their article “Precarious Labor and the Digital Humanities.” We are answering that call
by investigating the working conditions of those who live on the hyphen and work as
invisible agents of digital labor. As this special issue of
Digital Humanities Quarterly is also a call for action, we see an
opportunity to discuss our experiences and hope they will lead to more recognition
from our various communities, as well as spark ideas for improvement and inclusion
in other DH communities.
We enjoy our hyphenated lives, and our ability to build bridges between and
contribute to fields we love. But we also are tired, overworked and
underappreciated, in large part because our split professional identities often fit
us nowhere, marking a particular kind of intersection that warrants recognition.
At the Intersection of Overtaxed and Underevaluated
Like many practitioners of digital humanities, we frequently find our services
and insights in high demand because of our combination of skills. We give guest
lectures via Skype and speak at other institutions, not just on our scholarly
output but also on librarianship, digital practice, and teaching. We provide
support ranging from consultation to project management on large-scale digital
humanities projects, and we advise colleagues on smaller digital projects, often
serving as both project managers and technicians. We also create our own digital
humanities projects based on our research and professional responsibilities.
And yet, despite demands for these services and insights and consultations, we
are aware that many faculty do not position us as scholarly equals, and that we
are underserved by the outdated criteria used to evaluate our performance. Our
supervisors applaud our scholarship yet nonetheless struggle to view research as
a billable aspect of our roles and responsibilities, rather than an
extracurricular activity done outside of working hours. And they struggle to
justify our extracurricular activities according to the guidelines they use to
determine tenure and promotion. This makes the invisibility of our work as
consultants, technicians, and digital scholars more apparent.
When we do receive credit for our digital research activities, faculty and
administrators may fail to understand that our work is necessarily separated
between subject-specific research and library research and must therefore be
weighted differently. At other times our involvement is neither explicitly
librarianship nor explicitly digital humanities scholarship, but still fulfills
essential work in the spaces between, causing some of our colleagues to consider
us second-class researchers because our work does not fit clearly within one
silo or discipline. Suzan Alteri, University of Florida’s Curator of the Baldwin
Library of Historical Literature, encountered this problem after receiving grant
funding to produce an online annotated bibliography. This digital research
project combined Alteri’s expertise in rare books, book history, and children’s
literature. While the bibliographic aspect of the project fell under her
professional responsibilities, the research required to compile the bibliography
and contextualize texts was largely ignored. Having to combine subject research
with librarianship makes being a librarian and a digital scholar a real
struggle. The invisibility of non-discrete research intensifies the difference
from invisible labor to expected presentation, making it acute.
Splitting Professional Identities
Living on the hyphen, we are constantly juggling positionings and identities.
When someone asks us what our research is about, we struggle to answer. Do we
detail all of the work we do: our research in library science, our area
specialty, and digital humanities? Or do we only detail research that will be
most relevant to the person with whom we are speaking?
Dr. Hélène Huet, the University of Florida's European Studies Librarian, is a
digital humanist and a specialist in both book history and the French literary
movement known as Decadence. Thus, Huet is both a digital practitioner and a
digital humanities expert for the community in which she works. On a given day,
depending on whether she is talking to librarians, digital humanists, or French
and Francophone Studies scholars, she discusses a different area of her current
research. Her example highlights one of the issues we are facing. Indeed, while
we love our multi-faceted professional identities, we sometimes think we are
losing our identity, and that by participating across so many different fields,
we are alien to all of them.
Living on the hyphen takes its toll, as we spread our inadequate research time
too thin or fail to adequately demonstrate the multi-faceted nature of our work
as scholars and professionals.
Realizing the Promise
Faculty and administration can take several positive steps toward realizing
Risam’s promise and helping us solve the problem.
First, we must all take responsibility for making all aspects of our work visible
to others. Therefore, at your next conference presentation, please talk about
how you completed your digital humanities project, what tools you used, what
decisions you made, who your collaborators were, and how your community and
working conditions made it possible. Encourage other presenters to focus on the
methodological aspects of the collaboration, as well as the results. Open up
calls for papers to include not just scholarly and theoretical concerns, but
practical concerns as well. Encourage practitioners and scholars to see each
other as equals. This is a call for all of us to be generous, generative, and
inclusive.
Second, departments and programs need to revise their tenure and promotion
standards to ensure that hyphenated scholars — individuals who increasingly
represent the norm within academia — are recognized for their work. This
requires reflecting on the origins of the term hyphenated, and is indicative of
a change to better support our colleagues of color and colleagues from different
cultural backgrounds who face additional demands from hyphenated identities and
systematic oppression.
Finally, we all need to push for a cultural change that includes all people
involved in academic work thus making visible the invisible work of those on the
hyphen, including but not limited to librarians-scholars-digital practitioners.
Achieving this cultural change within and alongside other communities pushing
for recognition of labor conditions and labor communities only makes sense.
Alone, our work is rendered invisible, but working collectively towards changing
the daily practices of academia can make the full scope, impact, and import of
our work visible. In doing so, we might make visible understandings of work that
are appreciative, compassionate, and connected.
Works Cited
Boyles 2018 Boyles, C.; Cong-Huyen, A.; Johnston,
C.; McGrath, J. and Phillips. A. “Precarious Labor and the
Digital Humanities.”
American Quarterly 70.3 (2018): 693-700.
Kirschenbaum 2012 Kirschenbaum, M. “Digital Humanities As/Is a Tactical Term.” In M. K.
Gold (ed), Debates in the Digital Humanities.
University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis (2012), pp. 415-28.
Nowviskie 2016 Nowviskie, B. “Resistance in the Materials.” In M. K. Gold and L. F.
Klein (eds), Debates in the Digital Humanities.
University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis (2016).
http://dhdebates.gc.cuny.edu/debates/text/66
Pérez Firmat 1994 Pérez Firmat, G. “Life on the Hyphen: The Cuban-American Way” In Bulletin for Biblical Research University of Texas
Press, Austin, TX (1994).
Risam 2019 Risam, R. New
Digital Worlds: Postcolonial Digital Humanities in Theory, Praxis, and
Pedagogy. Northeastern University Press, Evanston, IL (2019).
Working Group on Labor in Digital Libraries 2018 “Research Agenda: Valuing Labor in Digital Libraries.” Working Group
on Labor in Digital Libraries. Digital Library Federation. (2018).
https://wiki.diglib.org/images/d/d0/DLF_ValuingLabor_ResearchAgenda_2018.pdf