Maack, Mary Niles. “I Cannot Get Along Without the Books I Find Here: The American Library in Paris During the War: Occupation, and Liberation, 1939-1945”. Library Trends 55, no. 3 (2007): 490-512.
Mary Niles Maack
Fixed Name
Mary Niles Maack
First name
Mary Niles
Last name
Maack
Dain, Phyllis, Jack Dalton, Lowell Martin, Guy Garrison, Patricia Reeling, Doris Cruger Dale, James D. Anderson, Susan Otis Thompson, R. Kathleen Molz, and Mary Niles Maack. “Appreciations and Memorial Tributes from Friends and Colleagues”. Libraries & Culture 29, no. 1 (1994): 133-41.
Maack, Mary Niles. “International Dimensions of Library History: Leadership and Scholarship, 1978-1998”. Libraries & Culture 35, no. 1 (2000): 66-76.
Maack, Mary Niles. “Introduction: John Y. Cole: Librarian, Bookman, and Scholar”. Libraries & The Cultural Record 45, no. 1 (2010): 1-4.
Maack, Mary Niles. “Public Libraries in Transition: Ideals, Strategies, and Research”. Libraries & Culture 29, no. 1 (1994): 75-94.
Maack, Mary Niles. “The Library of Congress and the Center for the Book: Historical Essays in Honor of John Y. Cole”. Libraries & The Cultural Record.
Raber, Douglas, and Mary Niles Maack. “Scope, Background, and Intellectual Context of the Public Library Inquiry”. Libraries & Culture 29, no. 1 (1994): 26-48.
Maack, Mary Niles. “No Philosophy Carries So Much Conviction As the Personal Life: Mary Wright Plummer As an Independent Woman”. Library Quarterly 70, no. 1 (2000): 1-46.
Maack, Mary Niles. “Telling Lives: Women Librarians in Europe and America at the Turn of the Century”. In Gendering Library History, edited by Evelyn Kerslake and Mickianne Moody, 57-81. Liverpool, England: Media Critical and Creative Arts, John Moores University, Association for Research in Popular Fictions, 2000.
Mediavilla, Cynthia Lou, and Mary Niles Maack. “Carma Russell (Zimmerman) Leigh: An Historical Look at a Woman of Vision and Influence”. University of California, 2000.
Maack, Mary Niles. “Books and Libraries As Instruments of Cultural Diplomacy in Francophone Africa During the Cold War”. Libraries & Culture 36, no. 1 (2001): 58-86.
Maack, Mary Niles. “‘The Lady and the Antelope’ Suzanne Briet’s Contribution to the French Documentation Movement”. Library Trends 52, no. 4 (2004): 719-47.
Maack, Mary Niles. “Literacy, Equality, and Community: Libraries, Philanthropy, and the Literacy Movement in Contemporary France”. Libraries & Culture 31, no. 2 (1996): 466-91.
Carmichael, James V., Jr., Laurel A. Grotzinger, and Mary Niles Maack. “Southerners in the North and Northerners in the South: The Impact of the Library School of the University of Illinois on Southern Librarianship”. In Women’s Work: Vision and Change in Librarianship: Papers in Honor of the Centennial of the University of Illinois Graduate School of Library and Information Science University of Illinois GSLIS Occasional Papers, 27-104.
Grotzinger, Laurel A., James V. Carmichael Jr., and Mary Niles Maack. “Invisible, Indestructible Network: Women and the Diffusion of Librarianship at the Turn of the Century”. In Women’s Work: Vision and Change in Librarianship: Papers in Honor of the Centennial of the University of Illinois Graduate School of Library and Information Science, 7-26. Champaign, IL: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,Graduate School of Library and Information Science, 1994.
Grotzinger, Laurel A., James V. Carmichael Jr, and Mary Niles Maack. Women’s Work: Vision and Change in Librarianship: Papers in Honor of the Centennial of the University of Illinois Graduate School of Library and Information Science. University of Illinois GSLIS Occasional Papers. Champaign, IL: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.; Graduate School of Library and Information Science, 1994.
Maack, Mary Niles, and Joanne Passet. Aspirations and Mentoring in an Academic Environment: Women Faculty in Library and Information Science. Contributions in Librarianship and Information Science. Vol. 75. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1994.
Chung, Su Kim, and Mary Niles Maack. “We Seek to Be Patient: Jeanne Wier and the Nevada Historical Society, 1904-1950”. University of California, 2015.
Maack, Mary Niles. “Gender, Culture, and the Transformation of American Librarianship, 1890-1920”. Libraries & Culture 33, no. 1 (1998): 51-61.
Maack, Mary Niles. “American Bookwomen in Paris During the 1920s”. Libraries & Culture 40, no. 3 (2005): 399-415.
Maack, Mary Niles. “Women As Visionaries, Mentors, and Agents of Change”. Grotzinger, Laurel A., James V. Carmichael, Jr., and Mary Niles Maack. Women’s Work: Vision and Change in Librarianship: Papers in Honor of the Centennial of the University of Illinois Graduate School of Library and Information Science University of Illin, no. July (1994): 105-30.