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Librarianship and Legitimacy The Ideology of the Public Library Inquiry
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Book Code: GM0234
ISBN: 0-313-30234-0
ISBN-13: 978-0-313-30234-3
184 pages
Greenwood Press
Publication: 10/30/1997
List Price: $105.00 (UK Sterling Price: £59.95)
Availability: Out of stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Reviews:
  • ...this analysis provides an opportunity to study the past to better understand the present. It also reveals values and value conflicts that continue to plague the profession. Raber's work is an excellent resource for MLIS faculty preparing public librarians for a vastly different environment than in postwar America but nevertheless still as equally intent on defining public librarianship.
    —Library Journal
  • [T]his study is recommended to leaders and thinkers in the profession to help them sharpen their intellectual skills for rethinking the role of the public library. And it could help public librarians to lift their eyes from the town hall to the big picture.
    —The Australian Library Journal
Description: The decade prior to World War II was a time of intense introspection on the part of librarians. There was considerable controversy over whether librarianship constituted a science in any proper sense of the term. Education for librarianship was undergoing close scrutiny and reform. Issues related to federal aid, adult education, and rural library development were unresolved and subject to heated discussion. In the late 1940s the Public Library Inquiry was conceived to study and document the conditions, achievements, and weaknesses of public libraries and librarianship. For the next 40 years, the Inquiry set the tone and agenda for professional discourse about the purpose of the public library. This book examines the professional and political ideology that informed and sustained the Public LIbrary Inquiry. The volumes of the Inquiry, while representing the results of research on the status of the public library and librarianship, also reveal a remarkably consistent ideological position that united them in a way perhaps unintended by their creators. Inherent in the Inquiry's discourse are particular notions and assumptions about the nature of American democracy, the public library, and relations between them. The Inquiry also reflects, in its recommendations, particular professional values that define what the public library's purpose ought to be if the library is to contribute meaningfully to a democratic culture, and gain social recognition of that contribution.
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction
  • Interpretive Context: Librarianship and Professional Ideology
  • The Public Library and the Postwar World
  • The Beginnings of the Public Library Inquiry
  • Leigh's Proposal
  • The Critique of the Public Library
  • The Critique of American Culture
  • Democracy and the Civic Library
  • The Political Strategy
  • Conclusion
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Index
LC Card Number: 97-9376
LCC Class: Z731
Dewey Class: 027
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