“…While these examples are drawn from the information behavior literature, similar rhetorical uses of holistic (i.e., to argue for more expansive perspectives, approaches, and ways of understanding), are visible across the library and information science literature. Examples can be seen in studies on information retrieval (Hu et al, 2015), information security (Soomro, Shah, & Ahmen, 2015), cybersecurity (Atoum, Otoom, & Ali, 2014), digital libraries (Zhang, 2010), digital preservation (Rafferty & Pad, 2017), library services (Mojapelo & Dube, 2017), information literacy (Nazari & Webber, 2012), library collections development (Duncan & O'Gara, 2015), serials control (Haworth Editorial Submission, 1979), quantitative evaluation (White, 1977), library accessibility (Pionke, 2017), reference services (Scales, Turner‐Rahman, & Hao, 2015), and critical librarianship (Espinal, Sutherland, & Roh, 2018). The use of holistic is motivated by different goals in these examples, from service enhancement to social justice, but the term's rhetorical role remains consistent.…”