All posts by Brenna McLaughlin

2021 Cross-Pollination Reports: Maia Desjardins

The AUPresses/Library Publishing Coalition Cross-Pollination program provides registration waivers at both organizations’ annual conferences for members of the other to attend, in order to foster cross-professional knowledge sharing. In 2021, Hannah Brooks-Motl and Maia Desjardins received registration waiver grants to attend the virtual Library Publishing Forum; Robert Browder and Sarah Wipperman received registration waiver grants to attend the virtual AUPresses 2021.

Maia Desjardins, Digital Projects Coordinator, Wilfrid Laurier University Press

I had been working in libraries for over a decade before making the move to Academic Publishing in the already tumultuous year of 2020. I was eager to learn about new standards and workflow of the publishing world whilst still pulling from my knowledge of Library Sciences. When the Cross-Pollination Program was brought to my attention, I leapt at the opportunity to explore this intersection of libraries and publishing armed with my varying experience in both fields. I am glad that I did as it proved a great way to stay in touch with contemporary library issues and provided insight for my current role.

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2021 Cross-Pollination Reports: Robert Browder

The AUPresses/Library Publishing Coalition Cross-Pollination program provides registration waivers at both organizations’ annual conferences for members of the other to attend, in order to foster cross-professional knowledge sharing. In 2021, Hannah Brooks-Motl and Maia Desjardins received registration waiver grants to attend the virtual Library Publishing Forum; Robert Browder and Sarah Wipperman received registration waiver grants to attend the virtual AUPresses 2021.

Robert Browder, Digital Publishing Specialist, Virginia Tech University Libraries

Attending the AUPresses Annual Meeting was an enriching experience. My thanks to the Association of University Presses (AUPresses) and the Library Publishing Coalition (LPC) for making it happen. I felt the conference was well organized and the convenience of Zoom delivery allowed me to attend while maintaining a presence with my regular duties; I hope to attend the AUPresses Annual Meeting in person in the future.

Continue reading 2021 Cross-Pollination Reports: Robert Browder

2021 Cross-Pollination Report: Sarah Wipperman

The AUPresses/Library Publishing Coalition Cross-Pollination program provides registration waivers at both organizations’ annual conferences for members of the other to attend, in order to foster cross-professional knowledge sharing. In 2021, Hannah Brooks-Motl and Maia Desjardins received registration waiver grants to attend the virtual Library Publishing Forum; Robert Browder and Sarah Wipperman received registration waiver grants to attend the virtual AUPresses 2021.

Sarah Wipperman, Scholarly Communications Librarian, Villanova University

I feel very fortunate to have been able to attend AUPresses 2021: It is a conference that has been on my wish list for a while but which I had never had the pleasure of attending. I was certainly not disappointed. 

AUPresses 2021 took place in half day increments over a two-week period, June 7-18, 2021. Given the length of time, the conference sometimes felt like a marathon, but the days themselves were fairly well-balanced. Each day started with a brief welcome message and introduction for the day’s events. This was normally followed by a couple of sessions (plenaries, general sessions, concurrent sessions, interactive collaboration labs), and the day typically ended with a networking event. Most of the conference ran through the Whova platform, which provided a unique yet familiar interface for watching videos, chatting with other participants, asking questions, and creating community groups. I would be remiss if I did not also mention the oddly fantastic music that played while the clock counted down to the start of each session. It was a welcome and energizing interlude between events!

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2021 Cross-Pollination Reports: Hannah Brooks-Motl

The AUPresses/Library Publishing Coalition Cross-Pollination program provides registration waivers at both organizations’ annual conferences for members of the other to attend, in order to foster cross-professional knowledge sharing. In 2021, Hannah Brooks-Motl and Maia Desjardins received registration waiver grants to attend the virtual Library Publishing Forum; Robert Browder and Sarah Wipperman received registration waiver grants to attend the virtual AUPresses 2021.

Hannah Brooks-Motl, Assistant Acquisitions Editor, Amherst College Press & Lever Press

Amherst College Press and Lever Press are library-funded fully open access members of the Association of University Presses; they exist in both university-press and library-publishing worlds. A common way to put it—that there are different “worlds” of UPs and libraries. “I’m learning a lot about the library world,” I’ll say. “In UP world” is sometimes “in press world” or “in the world of publishing.” While the two presses orbit both planets, it’s not always intuitive navigation. One key takeaway for me from this year’s Library Publishing Forum was “infrastructure” and the opportunities for press and library worlds to think and act infrastructurally together.

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Welcome Back!

AUPresses is very pleased to welcome readers back to the Digital Digest! After a hiatus of several years, we have migrated our Digest content over to this new site on UP Commons.

Please bookmark our new address for future reads! We’re looking forward to publishing new posts and insights from our community in this refreshed space. 

While the Digest was quiet, we published a number of wonderful reading lists, in the tradition of Books for Understanding and the 2017 Charlottesville Curriculum, elsewhere: from Equity, Justice, and Inclusion Community Reads nominations, to an interrelated set of lists for pandemic reading, to UP Week Galleries, and a summer reading list at our new Bookshop.org shop. Keep an eye out later this month for reports from the 2021 AUPresses-LPC Cross-Pollination Program and more new pieces coming throughout the year!  

Charlottesville Curriculum

After Charlottesville, local debates over the place of Confederate monuments in United States public places roared into the national spotlight. With a broad knowledge of the fields of study that have examined the history, policy, and cultural meanings of such monuments, University Press of Kansas Editor-in-Chief Joyce Harrison compiled for the Association a list of relevant university-press-published scholarship for us to share as part of the #CharlottesvilleCurriculum effort. There are many other deeply urgent aspects to what happened in Charlottesville on August 12, and several Association members have also compiled valuable resource lists under the #CharlottesvilleCurriculum tag. More can also be found in sections of the Books for Understanding: Race Relations in the US bibliography.

Compiled and introduced by Joyce Harrison

As more and more Confederate monuments and symbols are removed in US cities and towns, many people new to the issue have wondered why. Is it a bit extreme? Are we erasing history by removing them?

The books in this list were written by people who have spent their lives and careers studying how Americans remembered victory and defeat, how southerners honored the Confederate dead, and what monuments meant when they were built—and continue to mean—as our troubled past haunts us, over 150 years after the end of the Civil War.

University presses can help us understand and allow us to contribute to informed discussion and debate.

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