Libricide: The Regime-Sponsored Destruction of Books and Libraries in the Twentieth Century
Autor Rebecca Knuthen Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 iul 2003 – vârsta până la 17 ani
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780313361487
ISBN-10: 0313361487
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0313361487
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Notă biografică
REBECCA KNUTH is Chair of the Library and Information Science Program at the University of Hawaii, where she is also Associate Professor.
Recenzii
Knuth really brings her point home. Her provocative study is recommended for professional reading collections, library schools, and educated general readers interested in intellectual freedom.
After summarily disposing in her first few pages of the longer history of desultory library destruction, she goes into detailed accounts of recent purposeful library depredations (those of the last three-score years or so) involving ideology-driven, regime-sponsored, systematic destruction of book collections intended to bring about the suppression of an entire populace, culture, and/or political will. Hers is a sobering story indeed..Although this is not a pleasant book to read, Knuth is a careful scholar and an engaging writer. Of the three recent books on this same general theme read by this reviewer, hers is easily the most thorough and compelling. It is comprehensively researched, fully documented, and well annotated.
Knuth expertly straddles the disciplines of political history, political philosophy, sociology and of course, library and information science, to deliver a piece of work that would be of interest to students and scholars rooted in any of these aforementioned disciplines..[a] truly indispensable resource. Not only is Libricide indispenable, it is seminal.
Lurking behind the academic prose of this historical survey is a compelling, provocative analysis of Libricide, the systematic destruction or robbery of books and other cultural artifacts as part of an ideological campaign against a group or nation..Knuth's argument is powerfully drawn.
The subject matter and details presented in the case studies are both compelling on their own and skillfully presented in a narrative that is engaging and readable..Libricide is obviously an important phenomenon.
Argues that government-authorized book-burning often precedes or accompanies genocide, since the obliteration of a people cannot be accomplished without destroying its printed history.
Knuth's study should be on every librarian's reading list.
After summarily disposing in her first few pages of the longer history of desultory library destruction, she goes into detailed accounts of recent purposeful library depredations (those of the last three-score years or so) involving ideology-driven, regime-sponsored, systematic destruction of book collections intended to bring about the suppression of an entire populace, culture, and/or political will. Hers is a sobering story indeed..Although this is not a pleasant book to read, Knuth is a careful scholar and an engaging writer. Of the three recent books on this same general theme read by this reviewer, hers is easily the most thorough and compelling. It is comprehensively researched, fully documented, and well annotated.
Knuth expertly straddles the disciplines of political history, political philosophy, sociology and of course, library and information science, to deliver a piece of work that would be of interest to students and scholars rooted in any of these aforementioned disciplines..[a] truly indispensable resource. Not only is Libricide indispenable, it is seminal.
Lurking behind the academic prose of this historical survey is a compelling, provocative analysis of Libricide, the systematic destruction or robbery of books and other cultural artifacts as part of an ideological campaign against a group or nation..Knuth's argument is powerfully drawn.
The subject matter and details presented in the case studies are both compelling on their own and skillfully presented in a narrative that is engaging and readable..Libricide is obviously an important phenomenon.
Argues that government-authorized book-burning often precedes or accompanies genocide, since the obliteration of a people cannot be accomplished without destroying its printed history.
Knuth's study should be on every librarian's reading list.