Search Results
Barnard Center for Research on Women records, 1962-2020
57 Linear FeetBC13-58_SFAudio_161, The Scholar and Feminist XII (Women and Culture in Politics): Afternoon Session 17, part 2, 1985-03-30 Box 45
- Highlight
- -58_SFAudio_160. Papers presented or name of session: "Outside the Fraternity: Women in Jazz".
- Abstract Or Scope
-
Lecture and performances given by Linda Dahl, freelance writer and novelist, author of Stormy Weather, the Music and Lives of a Century of Jazzwomen and Nina Sheldon, performer, Rutgers University during the Afternoon Session of the Scholar and Feminist XII. This recording is preceded by BC13-58_SFAudio_160. Papers presented or name of session: "Outside the Fraternity: Women in Jazz".
- Lectures, Conferences, Exhibits, and Events, 1972-2018
- The Scholar and the Feminist, 1972-2018
- Audio recordings of the Scholar and the Feminist conferences (cassette tapes), 1983-1987
Clark Hoyt papers, 2009 - 2012
10 boxesThe Clark Hoyt collection is organized around the columns he wrote as public editor, with each being accompanied by related materials including notes, Q and A emails with Times staffers; emails from readers, which often served as the trigger for the column in question; emails with expert sources, and printed copies of Times articles that prompted the public editor's inquiries.
"A Private Room With a Narrow View", 05/30/2010 Box 21, Folder 6
- Highlight
- (When jazz legend Hank Jones died at 91, a Times reporter who lived across the street on the Upper
- Abstract Or Scope
-
(When jazz legend Hank Jones died at 91, a Times reporter who lived across the street on the Upper West Side gained access to the musician's living quarters, a small bedroom he rented from an old friend who had been taking care of him)
Institute for Research on Women, Gender, and Sexuality Oral History Collection, 2014-2015
35 VolumesFarah Griffin, 2015 June 9 Box 2
- Highlight
- Cool: Miles Davis, John Coltrane, and the Greatest Jazz Collaboration Ever (Thomas Dunne, 2008). She
Conversations: The New Jazz Studies (Columbia University Press, 2004).
intellectual interests, including Black feminism, Black feminist literary studies, jazz studies, gender and - Abstract Or Scope
-
In this interview, Farah Griffin begins by discussing her early life in South Philadelphia, her love of reading, her relationship with her father and how he was impacted by racial prejudice, the demographics of her neighborhood, and her personal study of women's history and black history. She talks about her early education at an integrated Philadelphia magnet school and the Baldwin School. She goes on to address the origins of her admiration for Toni Morrison, her decision to attend Harvard University as an undergraduate, and her mentors at Harvard: Nathan Huggins and Werner Sollors. Griffin talks about her intellectual interests, including Black feminism, Black feminist literary studies, jazz studies, gender and sexuality, and literature. Griffin discusses her PhD program in American Studies at Yale and cites the classes and professors that influenced her. She briefly addresses her time at the University of Pennsylvania and her own activist work. She characterizes the climate of the English department when she arrived at Columbia and how she was immediately embraced by IRWGS and by the Institute for Research in African-American Studies (IRAAS). Griffin talks about her mentorship with Jean Howard and her involvement in diversity initiatives. She discusses her bookHarlem Nocturne, novelist Ann Petry, and her work spreading black women's intellectual history. Griffin concludes the interview by reflecting on how the student body has changed during her time at Columbia. She specifically addresses generational differences between herself and her students, especially regarding the election of President Barack Obama, the backlash after his election, the shooting of Trayvon Martin, the protests in Ferguson, Missouri, the Black Lives Matter movement, and anti-sexual violence activism on campus.
The Makino Mamoru Collection on the History of East Asian Film, 1863-2015, bulk 1920s-1990s
370.11 linear feetSubseries VI.13: Music Songbooks, 1924-1987 [Bulk Dates:1960-1969], 1924-1987
- Highlight
- songbook, jazz music, shamisen music songs, songs from an annual singing contest held on New Year's Eve
- Abstract Or Scope
-
This subseries contains popular Japanese music songbooks that cover the following areas: national anthems, theme songs, collections of popular songs, school songs and dormitory songs, a Girl Scout songbook, jazz music, shamisen music songs, songs from an annual singing contest held on New Year's Eve, folk songs, military songs, parodies, ballads, bawdy songs, youthful songs, and enka (traditional-style Japanese popular ballads).
Tania León papers, 1960s-2020s
110 Linear FeetGerald Christoff Music collection, 1964-2013
2.5 Linear Feet70 titles of music scores (with some parts), totaling roughly 460 p.