Abstract
In Main Street Public Library, eminent library historian Wayne Wiegand studies four emblematic small-town libraries in the Midwest from the late nineteenth century through the federal Library Service Act of 1956, and shows that these institutions served a much different purpose than is so often perceived. Rather than acting as neutral institutions that are vital to democracy, the libraries of Sauk Centre, Minnesota; Osage, Iowa; Rhinelander, Wisconsin; and Lexington, Michigan, were actually mediating community literary values and providing a public space for the construction of social harmony. These libraries, and the librarians who ran them, were often just as susceptible to the political and social pressures of their time as any other public institution. © 2011 by the University of Iowa Press. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Wiegand, W. A. (2011). Main street public library: Community places and reading spaces in the rural heartland, 1876-1956. Main Street Public Library: Community Places and Reading Spaces in the Rural Heartland, 1876-1956 (pp. 1–244). University of Iowa Press. https://doi.org/10.17077/0003-4827.1681
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