Re/marks on power : how annotation inscribes history, literacy, and justice / Remi Kalir.
2025
Z693.3.A55
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Details
Title
Re/marks on power : how annotation inscribes history, literacy, and justice / Remi Kalir.
Author
ISBN
0262381494 (electronic bk.)
9780262381499 (electronic bk.)
9780262551038
9780262381499 (electronic bk.)
9780262551038
Published
Cambridge : The MIT Press, [2025]
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (192 pages).
Call Number
Z693.3.A55
Dewey Decimal Classification
025.3
Summary
An interdisciplinary exploration of annotation that shows how this participatory act marks public memory, struggles for justice, and social change. Annotation the seemingly simple act of marking a text is often diminished as a marginal practice. It is prohibited in physical objects and considered irrelevant to social and political concerns. But what if annotation were reimagined as a critical and civic literacy that can inscribe public memory, struggles for justice, and social change In Re/Marks on Power , education researcher Remi Kalir argues that enduring traces of annotation can be read and (re)written to advance counternarratives and more just social futures. Kalir's interdisciplinary approach examines annotation in archives and libraries, on walls and in books, atop maps and monuments, and along byways and all manner of margins to describe the relevance of re/marks. With a series of vivid and wide-ranging cases, Kalir describes how groups of annotators make public re/marks of resistance and creativity, often with simple tools and accessible methods. These annotations alter familiar texts, oppose hateful ideology, and broadcast solidarity and social activism. Among the book's fresh reads of annotation are considerations of how Harriet Tubman's legacy is remembered and honored, how the US-Mexico border was defined and is restoried, how problematic public monuments are contested and reimagined, and how books featuring LGBTQIA+ topics are classified, censored, and celebrated. Re/Marks on Power honors the actions of annotators, whether eminent or anonymous, and highlights how material traces have mediated justice-oriented possibility. Throughout this book, the author makes visible a new social language of annotation that can be read across time and texts.
Source of Description
OCLC-licensed vendor bibliographic record.
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Vendor-supplied metadata.
Series
The MIT Press
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