Made Free and Thrown Open to the Public: Community Libraries in Pennsylvania from the Colonial Era Through World War II

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Product Details
Price
$69.00
Publisher
University of Pittsburgh Press
Publish Date
Pages
368
Dimensions
6.3 X 9.1 X 1.3 inches | 1.55 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780822947004

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About the Author
Bernadette A. Lear is the behavioral sciences and education librarian at Pennsylvania State University's Harrisburg campus. With Eric C. Novotny, she is the founding coeditor of the scholarly journal Libraries: Culture, History, and Society. Lear's research focuses on the history of libraries, which she studies as an intersection of cultural, labor, social, and women's history.
Reviews
Will prove invaluable to historians of libraries and culture for generations to come.-- "Library and Information History"
Bernadette Lear has provided library lovers a thoroughly researched and accessible history of Pennsylvania's libraries sometimes raucous transition from elitist subscription to socially conscious free public libraries. We cannot meet the challenges of today's libraries without knowing how our hodgepodge of library structures formed in the past century.--Robin Lesher, Pennsylvania Library Association
In Made Free and Thrown Open to the Public, author Bernadette Lear weaves a vivid tapestry that illustrates how Pennsylvania's public libraries evolved from Ben Franklin's time through the New Deal. Lear's exhaustive research and her ardor for libraries yields a unique resource that is rich in detail and chock-full of insights about Pennsylvania's infinite array of characters and communities. Pennsylvania's librarians and library lovers will be spellbound.--Glenn R. Miller, Deputy Secretary & Commissioner for Libraries, Pennsylvania Department of Education
This is a valuable study and no doubt one of great interest for library professionals, as well as those with an interest in women's history, local history, Pennsylvania history, and the history of education. While scholarly in nature, it is also accessible, and is obviously written by someone with a passion for the subject.--Jennifer Baka, Penn State University