Weissinger. Thomas. “Black Power Movement Book Publishing: Trends & Issues.” Collection Management 31 (no. 4. 2007): 24 pp.
_____. “Information as a Value Concept: Reconciling Theory and Practice.”Library Philosophy and Practice 8 (Fall 2005): 12 pp. Available at: http://libr.unl.edu:2000/LPP/lppv8n1.htm
_____.”A Bibliography of John Henrik Clarke.” In Jackson, Gerald G. We’re Not Going to Take it Anymore: Educational and Psychological Practices from an Africentric Paradigm of Helping (Silver Spring. MD: Beckham Publications Group. 2005): 167-176.
_____. “The New Literacy Thesis: Implications for Librarianship.” portal: Libraries and the Academy 4 (April 2004): 245-257.
_____. “Competing Models of Librarianship: Do Core Values Make a Difference?” Journal of Academic Librarianship 29 (January/February 2003): 32-39.
_____. “Black Studies Scholarly Communication: A Citation Analysis of Periodical Literature.” Collection Management 27 (nos. 3/4. 2002): 45-56.
_____. “Defining Black Studies on the World Wide Web.” Journal of Academic Librarianship 25 (July 1999): 288-293.
_____. “African-American Reference Books and the Reviewing Media.” In Deborah A. Curry. Susan Griswold Blandy and Lynne M. Martin. editors. Racial and Ethnic Diversity in Academic Libraries: Multicultural Issues (New York: Haworth Press. 1994): 137-151.
_____. “Reference Books Relating to Afro-American Literature: A Selected Bibliography.” Black American Literature Forum 23 (Spring 1989): 187-192.
Wilson. Joseph and Thomas Weissinger. Black Labor in America. 1865-1983: A Selected Annotated Bibliography (Westport. CT: Greenwood Press. 1986).
Like this:
LikeLoading...
Welcome to AFAS
Established as a section within the Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) of the American Library Association (ALA), the African American Studies Librarians Section (AFAS) is the outgrowth of a discussion group consisting of dynamic librarians with interest in and concern for African American studies and librarianship. Its circle of founding leaders include Clarence Chisholm, Stanton Biddle, Doris H. Clack, and William Welburn, among others.