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Craig Gibson's avatar

Thanks, John, for an excellent concluding piece in this series--which highlights the groupthink and the subtle (and sometimes not-so-subtle) tyranny underpinning it. The censoriousness that accompanies "rightthink" and being "On the Right Side of History" is very much with us now. In a way, #Critlib has become the new hegemon that can't be questioned in a profession supposedly dedicated to intellectual and academic freedom and freedom to read. #CritLib champions need to question their assumptions about the ethos of librarianship, and likely, their entire worldview.

The young librarian who approached you after your talk at the ALA conference was manifesting "preference falsification" in dealing with his or her colleagues in the workplace. That is, by now, a familiar phenomenon for too many in the field who have reservations, or who want to ask questions, or who have more complicated views, about the idols of #CritLib. A great irony of our times is how the "critical" attached to "CritLib" may not mean "critically reflective" at all, or interest in real critical inquiry, but induction into groupthink itself in order to be part of the socially acceptable group in the field. Independence of thought, whether about the anti-empiricism of either woke Left, or populist Right, now requires summoning a lot of courage and stamina in order to avoid self-censorship, and to ask some of the searching questions you've asked.

Thanks again for writing these courageous and necessary articles.

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S. Anderson's avatar

"John Stuart Mill argues that the tyranny of collective opinion often is more dangerous to intellectual independence than restrictions imposed by political rulers"-- incredibly pertinent.

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