Call for Papers:
 Cataloging & Classification Quarterly (CCQ)
Special Issue
Empowering Representations: Rethinking Surrogates from the Margins

The process of describing and categorizing a tangible or intangible object for 
inclusion in the collection of a cultural heritage institution (CHI) typically 
involves creating a surrogate.  The surrogate represents the acquired item, its 
provenance, physical, intellectual, and other (e.g., temporal, spatial) origins 
and characteristics in accordance with established guidelines and standards, 
further informed by institutional policies and practices.  Working within that 
framework, the "cataloger" selects what aspects of the object to include in the 
representation.  Consistency and uniformity of interpretation and application 
across the range of physical and digital acquisitions held by a library, 
archive, museum, or other cultural heritage institution are hallmarks of the 
process of representation, and the creation of surrogates (an encoded record) 
that may be shared among similar institutions.  There is an authority assumed 
in the representativeness of the surrogate as determined and applied by 
information professionals and their institutions as informed by 
long-established standards and practices, both nationally and internationally.

But what if those representations are themselves open to interpretation, and 
candidates for the kinds of close scrutiny and substantial rethinking that have 
emerged with movements, such as Black Lives Matter, Idle No More/Indigenous 
Lives Matter, and issues relating to LGBTQI communities, persons with 
dis/abilities, ageism, gender inequality, poverty, people without housing, and 
others?  Cataloging and classification derive largely from 19th century 
approaches to representation, codified, standardized, applied, and embedded 
within legacy systems throughout the 20th century.  While technologies have 
allowed for some augmentation of surrogates by those who use the collections, 
the core, largely Western European values and applications have endured.   By 
providing access to collections and to the items and information associated 
with them, surrogates have served an important purpose.  Nonetheless, 
approaches to representation deserve a closer look from a contemporary 
perspective.  Informed by the lens of a social justice imperative, what do we 
preserve, what can we rethink, what does that look like, and how can and should 
it be done?

We seek submissions on theoretical and applied approaches to representation 
from scholars and practitioners within North America or internationally, whose 
work is focused on libraries, archives, museums, or other cultural heritage 
institutions.  We encourage, in particular, papers that address solutions - 
innovations, novel approaches, a fundamental rethinking of models or 
frameworks, inclusive engagements with communities and/or collections that have 
been traditionally marginalized, and reconfigured standards, tools, or 
technologies that signal transformative change to the process of representation 
and the surrogates that result.  How do or will rethinking theories or 
practices that have foregrounded certain worldviews to the exclusion or 
obscuring of others lead to change that is measurably responsive to, and 
inclusive of those who have been silenced, ignored, underserved, or otherwise 
diminished?

Lynne Howarth, Faculty of Information, University of Toronto, and Katharine 
Leigh of Ball State University will be guest editors for this issue, which is 
scheduled for publication in late 2022. Following a two-step process, authors 
are invited, first, to submit an extended abstract (1200-1500 words exclusive 
of references) of their paper to the guest editors for initial review.  If 
accepted, authors will then be asked to submit an anonymized full paper which 
will be blind reviewed by a minimum of two reviewers. Acceptance of the 
extended abstract does not guarantee acceptance of the full paper. Those whose 
full papers are ultimately recommended for publication will revise and finalize 
the manuscript following the timelines, described below.

Please contact guest editors, 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> or 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> should you have any questions about 
this call.

Schedule:

Extended Abstracts of 1200-1500 words (exclusive of references) due to the 
guest editors by or before:  31 October 2021
Note:  Send the extended abstract as an attachment saved in a .doc, or .docx, 
or .rtf file format, to both 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> and 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.

Notification of acceptance of extended abstract and invitation to submit an 
anonymized full paper for blind peer review:  30 November 2021

Full papers for double blind peer review due by or before: 31 January 2022. 
Papers must follow CCQ Instructions for 
Authors<https://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?show=instructions&journalCode=wccq20>
 and be submitted through ScholarOne 
Manuscripts<https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/wccq>.

Peer Review and notification of acceptance of full paper (pending revisions): 
15 March 2022

Revisions to full paper due:  15 April 2022

Subsequent review of revisions, as required:  15 May 2022

All manuscript revisions completed by:  15 June 2022

Publication: Fall 2022

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