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Home
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Catalog
» Burning Books and Leveling Libraries
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Burning Books and Leveling Libraries
Extremist Violence and Cultural Destruction
Rebecca Knuth
Book Code:
C9007
ISBN:
0-275-99007-9
ISBN-13:
978-0-275-99007-7
DOI:
DOI:10.1336/0275990079
248 pages, n/a
Praeger Publishers
Publication:
5/30/2006
List Price:
$39.95
(
UK Sterling Price: £22.95
)
Availability:
In Stock
Media Type:
Hardcover
Trim Size:
6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Political Science
»
International Relations
Political Science
»
Civil/Political/Human Rights
Military Studies
»
Military & Politics
Library & Information Science
»
Library & Information Science (General)
Reviews:
Knuth has written a powerful, thought-provoking book to expand on her first book,
Libricide
(2003). She lays the groundwork by defining extremist behavior, destruction, and biblioclasm, in the historical and modern contexts. This book is divided into three parts. Each focuses on different aspects of power: at local levels, as part of totalitarian regimes, and as a result of grabs for power. Knuth examines the relative role of power and how biblioclasm is used as a means to gain attention, force beliefs, or hegemonize societies. The book presents in-depth analysis through a combination of actual cases, background information, and theory. Most eye-opening is the chapter on the invasion of Iraq and the irresponsible actions of the Bush administration, which resulted in the looting and destruction of centuries' worth of cultural and historical artifacts. Each chapter has significant bibliographic citations that reflect excellent research in the author's preparation for this book....Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.
—Choice
December 2006
Burning Books and Leveling Libraries
is an important study for political leaders around the world, for library association officials, for political scientists, and for all persons seriously interested in the preservation of the world's cultural, intellectual, and artistic heritage.
—Journal of Information Ethics
Spring 2008
Written in academic style, the book is a thorough look at the topic of library destruction. This book would be an excellent discussion tool for those who are concerned about intellectual freedom. This is not a read for the faint of heart. This book sounds the clarion call to protect our libraries and our books in any way we possibly can. This is a must read for all professional librarians, museum curators and cultural center directors
—Colorado Association of Libraries
March 2008
Drawing persuasively from history, political science, and social theory, Knuth creates a challenging and forceful framework for understanding violence against books and libraries. Knuth balances the rigor of her scholarship and the weight of her subject matter with an engaging, accessible style, creating a work deserving the attention of any educated reader interested in intellectual freedom or political extremism.
—Oklahoma Librarian
Jan/Feb 2008
This carefully researched volume is a sobering investigation of how in one century's time the world has lost extraordinary amounts of recorded human heritage. While it is an excellent selection for any LIS collection, its astounding breadth makes it an ideal interdisciplinary reader for political science, history and sociology collections. Strongly recommended for academic library and larger public library collections.
—Journal of Access Services
2006
[A] recommended addition for academic libraries that support LIS schools. Additionally, with its in-depth research and extensive resources this book is a good complement to history and sociology collections.
—Reference & User Services Quarterly
Spring 2007
Readers of this lucidly written, excellently organized, and passionately argued book may never be able to view libraries the same way again; libraries, the author demonstrates, are not just information portals or storehouses of ideas, but something more dangerous and often feared: they are battlefields....Knuth has so succinctly summed up dozens of biblioclasm tragedies, so neatly and agonizingly explained how politics, human psychology, and the heft of history lead to such events, that it is hard to conceive that they will not happen again. If policy makers read this book, a must for all library schools and those concerned with the fate of humankind and their culture, then we may very well be spared the repeat of such destructive tragedies.
—College and Research Libraries
January 2007
[A] scholarly study of nationalist, ethnic, religious, or political extremism taken to such lengths as to result in the wholesale destruction of libraries as an all-out assault upon cultural values the extremists despise. As Knuth shows, destruction of books goes hand in hand with destruction of people.
Burning Books And Leveling Libraries
especially focuses upon incidents of biblioclasm in the late 20th and earth 21st century.... [K]nuth reveals that using military might alone to advocate and enforce ideals is futile when humanitarian, security, and cultural concerns are ignored. Deftly researched and bitingly exact in its portrayal of extremist psychology and its terrible consequences,
Burning Books And Leveling Libraries
is highly recommended, as is Knuth's previous study in the field, "Libricide."
—MBR: The Bookwatch
December 2006
[F]or as long as libraries seem worth building and maintaining, extremists will have a good material target, even if they are thwarted by the likes of Google in their aim to erase the cultural record.
—Academia
October 2006
In
Burning
Books and Leveling Libraries: Extremist Violence and Cultural Destruction
, Knuth documents how extremists of all persuasions have destroyed books and libraries. She gives examples where the destruction of books is used as a tactic of political or ethnic protest, or as a result of power struggles and war, and concludes with a discussion of the cultural destruction of Iraq in 2003.
—American Libraries
September 2006
Knuth reports on the destruction of libraries and books by extremists around the world during the 20th century and investigates some of the complex motivations behind these violent acts. She first looks at the use of biblioclasm as a tactic of political or ethnic protest at the local level. Next, she discusses the purging of libraries in the aftermath of power struggles in Germany, Afghanistan, and Cambodia. The final three chapters consider the fate of libraries when war creates a power vacuum--with special attention paid to the looting of Iraq's cultural institutions in 2003.
—Reference & Research Book News
August 2006
Description:
Whether the product of passion or of a cool-headed decision to use ideas to rationalize excess, the decimation of the world's libraries occurred throughout the 20th century, and there is no end in sight. Cultural destruction is, therefore, of increasing concern.
In her previous book
Libricide,
Rebecca Knuth focused on book destruction by authoritarian regimes: Nazis, Serbs in Bosnia, Iraqis in Kuwait, Maoists during the Cultural Revolution in China, and the Chinese Communists in Tibet. But authoritarian governments are not the only perpetrators. Extremists of all stripes--through terrorism, war, ethnic cleansing, genocide, and other forms of mass violence--are also responsible for widespread cultural destruction, as she demonstrates in this new book.
Burning Books and Leveling Libraries
is structured in three parts.
Part I is devoted to struggles by extremists over voice and power at the local level, where destruction of books and libraries is employed as a tactic of political or ethnic protest.
Part II discusses the aftermath of power struggles in Germany, Afghanistan, and Cambodia, where the winners were utopians who purged libraries in efforts to purify their societies and maintain power.
Part III examines the fate of libraries when there is war and a resulting power vacuum.
The book concludes with a discussion of the events in Iraq in 2003, and the responsibility of American war strategists for the widespread pillaging that ensued after the toppling of Saddam Hussein. This case poignantly demonstrates the ease with which an oppressed people, given the collapse of civil restraints, may claim freedom as license for anarchy, construing it as the right to prevail, while ignoring its implicit mandate of social responsibility. Using military might to enforce ideals (in this case democracy and freedom) is futile, Knuth argues, if insufficient consideration is given to humanitarian, security, and cultural concerns.
Table of Contents:
Preface
Introducing Modern Biblioclasm
Tracing the Path of Extremism From Robespierre to Milosevic
Grappling for Voice and Power
Political Protestors and Amsterdam's South African Institute, 1984
Ethnic Biblioclasm, 1980-2005
Absolute Power and the Drive to Purify Society
National Socialism and the Destruction of Berlin's Institute for Sexual Knowledge, 1933
Secular Fanaticism and the Auto-Genocide of Cambodia, 1975-1979
Fundamentalism and the Destruction of Afghanistan's Cultural Heritage, 1994-2001
War, Power Vacuum, and Anarchy
Dueling Ideologies and Total War, 1939-1945
Anarchy and Acquisitive Vandalism, 1967-2003
Errors of Omission and Cultural Destruction in Iraq, 2003
Index
LC Card Number:
2006002747
LCC Class:
Z659
Dewey Class:
025
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