Canonicity and the American Public Library: The Case of American Women Writers
Wadsworth, Sarah
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/31903
Description
Title
Canonicity and the American Public Library: The Case of American Women Writers
Author(s)
Wadsworth, Sarah
Issue Date
2012
Keyword(s)
Main Street Public Library Collections
Abstract
Beginning with an overview of the debate over American women
writers and the academic canon, this essay inventories four clusters
of American women writers—domestic novelists, regionalists, modernists,
and writers of diverse ethnicities—within a representative
sampling of small-town public libraries across the Midwest from the
late nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century. The survey reveals some
surprising disjunctures that run counter to trends in the academy. It
also highlights the role publishers and bibliographers have played
in establishing favored texts for a general readership and demonstrates
that publishers of literary classics and bibliographies geared
toward librarians have not always promoted the same texts as their
academic counterparts. On the whole, it concludes, women writers
fared quite well in the hands of publishers and public libraries
promoting “the classics” at the same time that they suffered at the
hands of major textbook publishers and scholarly editors intent on
defining “the canon.”
Publisher
Johns Hopkins University Press and the Graduate School of Library and Information Science. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
ISSN
0024-2594
Type of Resource
text
Language
en
Permalink
http://hdl.handle.net/2142/31903
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1353/lib.2012.0017
Copyright and License Information
Copyright 2012 Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois.
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