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CHICAGO—The Infinite Loop: Archives and Time Travel in the Popular Imagination by Lynne M. Thomas and Katy Rawdon is out now! The newest entry in the Archival Futures series, a collaboration between SAA and the American Libraries Association, this book examines the intersection of archives and science fiction by exploring tropes and assumptions within the genre.
The fascination with time travel and its consistent popularity within the science fiction genre is deeply rooted in science fiction writers’ and readers’ passion for history and, by extension, for libraries and other kinds of archives. However, time travel, archives, and history intersect in the public imagination in ways that don’t always match the reality of archival work.
Authors Lynne M. Thomas and Katy Rawdon deftly explore the ways in which archives and archival work appear throughout science fiction in this latest entry of the Archival Futures series. Presenting a book that can serve as a teaching text, readers’ advisory guide, and thought-provoking page turner, the authors:
This book is available for purchase in print today. Learn more about The Infinite Loop: Archives and Time Travel in the Popular Imagination in the SAA bookstore.
Lynne M. Thomas, a twelve-time Hugo Award-winner, is the Head of the Rare Book and Manuscript Library and Juanita J. and Robert E. Simpson Rare Book and Manuscript Professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She previously served as the Head of Distinctive Collections and Curator of Rare Books and Special Collections at Northern Illinois University in DeKalb, Illinois. She is the co-author of “Special Collections 2.0” and the co-editor of “New Directions for Special Collections: An Anthology of Practice,” both with Beth Whittaker. She also co-edited the Hugo Award-winning “Chicks Dig Time Lords” with Tara O'Shea and contributes to the Verity! "Doctor Who" Podcast.
Katy Rawdon is the Coordinator of Technical Services for the Special Collections Research Center at Temple University. She worked previously as the Director of Archives, Libraries, and Special Collections at the Barnes Foundation. She co-authored the chapter "What's in a Name? Archives for Black Lives in Philadelphia and the Impact of Names and Name Authorities in Archival Description" in “Ethical Questions in Name Authority Control” and the Archives for Black Lives in Philadelphia Anti-Racist Description Resources (2019), and contributed to the Best Practices for Queer Metadata (2024) as part of the Queer Metadata Collective. She is also a published author of romance novels (as Katy James) and poetry.