This solid anthology makes a fine start at the effort in its
title, DEGREESIReclaiming the American Library Past: Writing the
Women In DEGREESR. Like most good beginnings, it succeeds first by
clarifying the status of the field and then by raising questions
for subsequent scholars to ponder and pursue. - DEGREESIHistory of
Education Quarterly DEGREESRThe essays in this book contribute
along several dimensions to the new scholarship on a profession and
public service of vital importance for well over a century to
American literacy, culture and invention. Their authors add to the
individual and collective biographies of women who have founded and
administered diverse institutions and taught succeeding generations
of librarians. The worksites of influential women such as Anne
Carroll Moore, Josephine Rathbone, and Grace Hebard, like the
nameless paid and volunteer staff who have served as unrecognized
catalogers and children's librarians, have varied. They range from
the pioneering libraries and library schools of the settled East-
including Brooklyn and the Harlem, Times Square, and Morningside
Heights neighborhoods of Manhattan- the historically Black Howard
University to the numberless small towns of the West. They include
the raw A&M colleges of Arkansas, Utah, New Mexico, and
similarly neglected centers of local and regional enlightenment
General
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