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American librarian and scholar (1945–2023) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mary Niles Maack (December 1945 – January 23, 2023) was an American librarian and scholar known for her work on comparative librarianship and the history of the book.
Maack was born in Paris, Illinois in 1945 to Augustus and Lillie Niles.[1] She graduated with a degree in history from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and earned her master's degree and Doctorate of Library Science from Columbia University.[1]
Maack did her doctoral research in West Africa which resulted in her first book, Libraries in Senegal.[2] She worked at New York Public Library.[3]
She was a tenured professor at the University of Minnesota for ten years and later at UCLA in the Department of Information Studies beginning in 1986.[1][2] She served as a Fulbright Professor at the French National Library School (Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Bibliothèques) in Villeurbanne from 1982 to 1983 and received grants to do research at the Bibliothèque Nationale.[1] She lectured and consulted internationally in North America, Europe, and Africa.[1]
She was the head of the head of the California Center for the Book and the author of a collection of essays about John Y. Cole, the founding director of the Center for the Book at the Library of Congress.[4]
Maack's work often focused on gender issues. Her research on the decrease of women faculty in LIS programs in the United States raised awareness of the tension between technological change and the historical role of women in librarianship.[5] She wrote in 2002 that she felt that "library feminism is alive and... feminist librarians are still engaged in the struggle for equalization in one profession."[6] Her published papers, Women in Library Education: Down the Up Staircase and Toward a History of Women in Librarianship: A Critical Analysis with Suggestions for Further Research examined the relationship between feminization and professionalism within librarianship.[7][8]
Maack won the Justin Winsor Prize of the American Library Association Library History Round Table in 1981 and the Jesse Shera Award of the ALA Library Research Round Table in 1992.[3] The UCLA Department of Information Studies awarded her the Distinguished Teaching Award in 2005.[3]
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