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.
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