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Tactical Urbanism for Librarians
Quick, Low-Cost Ways to Make Big Changes
Karen Munro
American Library Association, 2017

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Techniques for Electronic Resource Management
TERMS and the Transition to Open
Jill Emery
American Library Association, 2020

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Technology Disaster Response and Recovery Planning
A LITA Guide
Mary Mallery
American Library Association, 2015

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Technology for Small and One-Person Libraries
A LITA Guide
Rene J. Erlandson
American Library Association, 2013

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Technology Training in Libraries
American Library Association
American Library Association, 2010

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Teens and Libraries
Getting It Right
Elaine Meyers
American Library Association, 2003

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Textbooks in Academic Libraries
Selection, Circulation, and Assessment
Chris Diaz
American Library Association, 2017

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The Transformed Library
Jeannette Woodward
American Library Association, 2013

front cover of True Stories of Censorship Battles in America's Libraries
True Stories of Censorship Battles in America's Libraries
Valerie Nye
American Library Association, 2012

Intellectual freedom is a core value of librarianship, but fighting to keep controversial materials on the shelves can sometimes feel like a lonely battle. And not all censorship controversies involve the public objecting to a book in the collection—libraries are venues for displays and meetings, and sometimes library staff themselves are tempted to preemptively censor a work. Those facing censorship challenges can find support and inspiration in this book, which compiles dozens of stories from library front lines. Edifying and enlightening, this collection

  • Tells the stories of librarians who withstood difficult circumstances to champion intellectual freedom
  • Touches on prickly issues such as age-appropriateness, some librarians' temptation to preemptively censor, sensitive cultural expressions, and criminality in the library
  • Presents case studies of defenses that were unsuccessful, so librarians facing similar challenges can learn from these defeats

There are fewer situations more stressful in a librarian's professional life than being personally confronted with a demand to remove a book from the shelves or not knowing how to respond to other kinds of censorship challenges. Reading this book will help fortify and inform those in the fray.

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front cover of Twentieth-Century Popular Culture in Museums and Libraries
Twentieth-Century Popular Culture in Museums and Libraries
Fred E.H. Schroeder
University of Wisconsin Press, 1981
Although libraries and museums for many centuries have taken the lead, under one rational or another, in recovering, storing, and displaying various kinds of culture of their periods, lately, as the gap between elite and popular culture has apparently widened, these repositories of artifacts of the present for the future have tended to drift more and more to what many people call the aesthetically pleasing elements of our culture. The degree to which our libraries and museums have ignored our culture is terrifying, when one scans the documents and artifacts of our time which, if history in any wise repeats itself, will in the immediate and distant future become valuable indices of our present culture to future generations. As Professor Schroeder dramatically states it, “No doubt about it, it is the contemporary popular culture that is the endangered species.”
    The essays in this book investigate the reasons for present-day neglect of popular culture materials and chart the various routes by which conscientious and insightful librarians and museum directors can correct this disastrous oversight.
 
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