361 | -- | 369 | W. Boyd Rayward, Christine Jenkins. Libraries in Times of War, Revolution, and Social Change |
370 | -- | 386 | Kathy Lee Peiss. Cultural Policy in a Time of War: The American Response to Endangered Books in World War II |
387 | -- | 403 | Chengzhi Wang. Badly Wanted, but Not for Reading: The Unending Odyssey of The Complete Library of Four Treasures of the Wensu Library |
404 | -- | 420 | Hilde Godelieve, Dominique De Weerdt. The Discourse of Loss in Song Dynasty Private and Imperial Book Collecting |
421 | -- | 430 | Ping Situ. The Tianyige Library: A Symbol of the Continuity of Chinese Culture |
431 | -- | 441 | Huanwen Cheng, Donald G. Davis. Loss of a Recorded Heritage: Destruction of Chinese Books in the Peking Siege of 1900 |
442 | -- | 453 | Gerald S. Greenberg. The Paris Commune of 1871 and the Bibliothèque Nationale |
454 | -- | 463 | Melanie A. Kimball. From Refuge to Risk: Public Libraries and Children in World War I |
464 | -- | 473 | Debra Mitts-Smith. L'Heure Joyeuse: Educational and Social Reform in Post-World War I Brussels |
474 | -- | 489 | Alistair Black. "Arsenals of scientific and technical information": Public Technical Libraries in Britain during and Immediately after World War I |
490 | -- | 512 | Mary Niles Maack. "I Cannot Get Along without the Books I Find Here": The American Library in Paris during the War, Occupation, and Liberation, 1939-1945 |
513 | -- | 522 | Miriam Intrator. "People were literally starving for any kind of reading": The Theresienstadt Ghetto Central Library, 1942-1945 |
523 | -- | 535 | Nikola von Merveldt. Books Cannot Be Killed by Fire: The German Freedom Library and the American Library of Nazi-Banned Books as Agents of Cultural Memory |
536 | -- | 550 | Ilkka Mäkinen. Libraries and Reading in Finnish Military Hospitals during the Second World War |
551 | -- | 569 | Sharon Domier. From Reading Guidance to Thought Control: Wartime Japanese Libraries |
570 | -- | 582 | Tamara Shaw. Doing Their Part: The Services of the San Diego Public Library during World War II |
583 | -- | 596 | Gordon Barrick Neavill. Publishing in Wartime: The Modern Library Series during the Second World War |
597 | -- | 608 | Chris Lyons. "Children who read good books usually behave better, and have good manners": The Founding of the Notre Dame de Grace Library for Boys and Girls, Montreal, 1943 |
609 | -- | 622 | Margaret Stieg Dalton. The International Relations Office, 1956-1972 |
623 | -- | 637 | Jean L. Preer. Man's Right to Knowledge: Libraries and Columbia University's 1954 Cold War BicentennialMan's Right to Knowledge: Libraries and Columbia University's 1954 Cold War Bicentennial |
638 | -- | 650 | Louise S. Robbins. Publishing American Values: The Franklin Book Programs as Cold War Cultural Diplomacy |
651 | -- | 664 | Marek Sroka. The Music Collection of the Former Prussian State Library at the Jagiellonian Library in Kraków, Poland: Past, Present, and Future Developments |
665 | -- | 674 | Cheryl Knott Malone. Unannounced and Unexpected: The Desegregation of Houston Public Library in the Early 1950s |
675 | -- | 697 | Douglas Raber. ACONDA and ANACONDA: Social Change, Social Responsibility, and Librarianship |
698 | -- | 715 | Archie L. Dick. "The books were just the props": Public Libraries and Contested Space in the Cape Flats Townships in the 1980s |
716 | -- | 729 | Ellen Knutson. New Realities: Libraries in Post-Soviet Russia |
730 | -- | 745 | Nabil Al-Tikriti. "Stuff Happens": A Brief Overview of the 2003 Destruction of Iraqi Manuscript Collections, Archives, and Libraries |
746 | -- | 755 | Michele Valerie Cloonan. The Moral Imperative to Preserve |