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The Library's Cultural Contacts

Library Review

ISSN: 0024-2535

Article publication date: 1 August 1948

47

Abstract

A public library service is part ot adult education, but it is not the whole of it. This perfectly simple fact is so often overlooked by the extreme protagonists of two schools of thought in modern librarianship. The one, in its enthusiasm, embracing in its library policy everything from providing a book service to organising lectures, discussion groups, plays, cinema shows, musical recitals, and even the inevitable and unfortunate “brains trusts”; the other rigorously excluding everything but an efficient book service. That the former often works its extension wonders with a woefully inadequate book stock, hoping, no doubt, to whip up interest and support locally; and that the other often consciously narrows its definition of book “service” to conserve resources for its primary function, we can readily appreciate. But, after allowing for local conditions, which have a strong influence on the formulation of any intelligent library policy, we often feel that on either side there is a surprising failure to appreciate clear, simple fundamentals.

Citation

HOWARTH, R. (1948), "The Library's Cultural Contacts", Library Review, Vol. 11 No. 8, pp. 461-463. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb012128

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1948, MCB UP Limited

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