Abstract
PurposeThis project set out to explore information scholars’ perceptions of the influence of their keyword selections and the implications of their linguistic choices on possibilities for and perceptions of the field of Information Science. We trialed a narrative methodological approach to investigate the multiple stories told with specific keywords, how they relate to larger discourses within the field and the impact they have on the lives of information researchers.Design/methodology/approachThis paper draws on Arthur Frank’s narrative analysis to consider keywords as stories, which shape one’s sense of professional identity and belonging. The analysis, which is informed by insights from multi-disciplinary scholars of keywords, employs data from a keywords-oriented workshop with Information School faculty and students, as well as an online questionnaire sent to heads of Information Schools.FindingsWe did not find a singular definitive story of information science scholars’ experiences with keywords. Rather we identify tensions surrounding common and contested understandings of discipline, canon and information, engaging the complexity of interdisciplinary, international, intellectual and moral claims of the field. This research offers insight into the experiential factors that shape scholars’ engagement with keywords and the tensions they can create.Originality/valueA wealth of bibliometric analyses of keywords focuses on finding the “right” words to describe the scholarship you seek or the work you want others to discover. However, this study offers information researchers a novel approach, creating space to acknowledge the generative tensions of keywords, beyond the extractive logic of search and retrieval.
Reference32 articles.
1. About (n.d.), “About”, available at: https://web.archive.org/web/20230503164911/https://www.ischools.org/about (accessed 18 May 2023).
2. Association for Information Science and Technology (n.d.), “About ASIS&T”, available at: https://web.archive.org/web/20230514095640/https://www.asist.org/about/ (accessed 18 May 2023).
3. The invisible substrate of information science;Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology,1999
4. Bates, M.J. (2009), “Information”, in Bates, M.J. and Maack, M.N. (Eds), Encyclopedia of Library and Information Sciences, CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL.