The Development of Southern Public Libraries and the African American Quest for Library Access, 18981963
By (Author) Dallas Hanbury
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
4th December 2019
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
027.408996073078
Hardback
186
Width 160mm, Height 239mm, Spine 18mm
476g
Using the Atlanta, Birmingham, and Nashville Public Libraries as case studies, The Development of Southern Public Libraries and the African American Quest for Library Access, 1898-1963 argues that public libraries played an integral role in southern cities economic and cultural boosterism efforts during the New South and Progressive Eras. First, Southern public libraries helped institutionalize segregation during the early twentieth century by refusing to serve African Americans, or only to a limited degree. Yet, the Progressive Eras emphasis on self-improvement and moral uplift influenced southern public libraries to the extent that not all embraced total segregation. It even caused southern public libraries to remain open to the idea of slowly expanding library service to African Americans. Later, libraries social mission and imperfect commitment to segregation made them prime targets for breaking down the barriers of segregation in the post- World War II era. In this study, Dallas Hanbury concludes that dealing with the complicated and unexpected outcomes of having practiced segregation constituted a difficult and lengthy process for southern public libraries.
Hanburys three closely observed and tightly organized case studies demonstrate once and for all that southern urban library service to the African American population was at best an ambivalent proposition. The struggle for equal library service, racially integrated or not, lasted far longer than most histories credit, and was from the beginning a cornerstone on which other privileges of citizenship were built. The authors mastery of his material is gracefully dispensed but undeniably present -- James V. Carmichael, Professor, Department of Library and Information Studies, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Dallas Hanbury received his PhD in public history from Middle Tennessee State University.