9781003139591_10.4324_9781003139591-3.pdf

The first two decades of the twentieth century were formative for the library services for immigrants being established in the New York Public Library. The library’s literacy and citizenship activities were the grounds for the social transformation by which immigrants would become denizens of New Yo...

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Έκδοση: Taylor & Francis 2023
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spelling oapen-20.500.12657-611462024-03-27T14:14:24Z Chapter 1 Immigrants being at home in libraries Dalbello, Marija Books, cultures, anthropology, sociology,home thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JH Sociology and anthropology::JHM Anthropology::JHMC Social and cultural anthropology thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JH Sociology and anthropology::JHM Anthropology The first two decades of the twentieth century were formative for the library services for immigrants being established in the New York Public Library. The library’s literacy and citizenship activities were the grounds for the social transformation by which immigrants would become denizens of New York. This essay interprets the material practices and discursive representations of that period in the library’s institutional records that conveyed sanctioned versions of material culture of books and reading aimed at immigrants and contrasting them to other narratives and moral explanations that exposed the frictions and thresholds by which bodies, books, affects, and senses shaped the library as a place for immigrants and their “lived” use of the library. The language evocative of dirt and pollution brought to books and reading in the immigrant neighborhoods transferred the materiality of the immigrants’ tenement dwellings to the library spaces and reveals a contiguity between the library home and the tenement home. 2023-02-01T10:21:58Z 2023-02-01T10:21:58Z 2022 chapter 9780367689131 9780367689162 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/61146 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9781003139591_10.4324_9781003139591-3.pdf Taylor & Francis Reading Home Cultures Through Books Routledge 10.4324/9781003139591-3 The first two decades of the twentieth century were formative for the library services for immigrants being established in the New York Public Library. The library’s literacy and citizenship activities were the grounds for the social transformation by which immigrants would become denizens of New York. This essay interprets the material practices and discursive representations of that period in the library’s institutional records that conveyed sanctioned versions of material culture of books and reading aimed at immigrants and contrasting them to other narratives and moral explanations that exposed the frictions and thresholds by which bodies, books, affects, and senses shaped the library as a place for immigrants and their “lived” use of the library. The language evocative of dirt and pollution brought to books and reading in the immigrant neighborhoods transferred the materiality of the immigrants’ tenement dwellings to the library spaces and reveals a contiguity between the library home and the tenement home. 10.4324/9781003139591-3 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb f9c35336-6f79-4834-9095-55d251c32440 9780367689131 9780367689162 Routledge 24 open access
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language English
description The first two decades of the twentieth century were formative for the library services for immigrants being established in the New York Public Library. The library’s literacy and citizenship activities were the grounds for the social transformation by which immigrants would become denizens of New York. This essay interprets the material practices and discursive representations of that period in the library’s institutional records that conveyed sanctioned versions of material culture of books and reading aimed at immigrants and contrasting them to other narratives and moral explanations that exposed the frictions and thresholds by which bodies, books, affects, and senses shaped the library as a place for immigrants and their “lived” use of the library. The language evocative of dirt and pollution brought to books and reading in the immigrant neighborhoods transferred the materiality of the immigrants’ tenement dwellings to the library spaces and reveals a contiguity between the library home and the tenement home.
title 9781003139591_10.4324_9781003139591-3.pdf
spellingShingle 9781003139591_10.4324_9781003139591-3.pdf
title_short 9781003139591_10.4324_9781003139591-3.pdf
title_full 9781003139591_10.4324_9781003139591-3.pdf
title_fullStr 9781003139591_10.4324_9781003139591-3.pdf
title_full_unstemmed 9781003139591_10.4324_9781003139591-3.pdf
title_sort 9781003139591_10.4324_9781003139591-3.pdf
publisher Taylor & Francis
publishDate 2023
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