The Brown University Library has received a grant of $228,454 from the National Endowment for the Humanities to create a statewide database, entitled the Rhode Island Archival and Manuscript Collections Online (RIAMCO). Through the application of Encoded Archival Description (EAD) finding aids, RIAMCO will collocate more than 300 dispersed but overlapping collections about the history of Rhode Island drawn from local public and university libraries across the state, fashioning a union web resource hosted and supported by Brown University. The material documented in RIAMCO represents the history of Rhode Island from the colonial period to the present day and provides valuable insight into a range of topics including business, the Civil War, slavery, literature, church history, politics, diplomatic history, art and architecture, military history, labor, health and medicine, state and local government, higher education, and Native Americans. The RIAMCO project has been designated by NEH as a “We the People Project” for “promoting knowledge and understanding of American history and culture.”
Funding for this two-year project will improve access to archival and manuscript collections throughout Rhode Island. Library staff will create a web site and search interface allowing users with Internet access to search across Rhode Island collections for particular people, places, or subjects. This database will pull together disparate collections housed at various institutions, allowing researchers to find collections relating to their research through one comprehensive site regardless of their physical location. In many cases the papers of individuals and families are physically split among participating institutions and will now be intellectually reunited for the first time as a result of the online finding aids and the application of sophisticated search technologies developed in this project. Examples of the reunited collections include the personal and business records of the Brown family, the papers of Rhode Island Congressman Thomas Jenckes, and the architectural drawings and personal papers of Thomas Tefft.
“This project will facilitate deeper study of Rhode Island’s cultural and political history,” said Harriette Hemmasi, Joukowsky Family University Librarian. “I am deeply grateful to the NEH for funding this project and to our devoted collaborators for agreeing to work together on this exciting undertaking. Despite its small size, Rhode Island has played a big role in many of the seminal events in our country’s history. From the advent of the industrial revolution to the constitutional crisis precipitated by the Dorr Rebellion, RIAMCO will be a unique and much-needed resource for researching the frequently tumultuous, but never less than fascinating history of this unique place and people.”
“The RIAMCO project will provide an opportunity for archivists and special collections librarians throughout Rhode Island to work together to create a resource that will highlight the treasures in the state’s archival repositories. We are pleased that the NEH has provided funding to embark on this worthwhile and important project that will not only be beneficial to the residents of Rhode Island but to all students and scholars of American history,” said Jay Gaidmore, Brown University Archivist and RIAMCO Project Director.
In addition, archivists and special collection librarians will be trained in implementing EAD. Project staff will also work to standardize descriptive practices across institutions using Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS), which outlines rules for describing archives and pre-scribes a minimum set of required fields for finding aids. By standardizing descriptive practices, RIAMCO will facilitate the contribution of its EAD files to regional, national, and international union databases.
Participating institutions include Brown University, John Carter Brown Library, Providence College, Rhode Island Historical Society, Rhode Island School of Design, Rhode Island State Archives, Roger Williams University, Salve Regina University, University of Rhode Island, and Westerly Public Library.
Monthly Archives: March 2008
Treasures of the Hidden Chest
Konrad Tuchscherer, Associate Professor of African History and
Director of Africana Studies at St. John’s University
Gallery, Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology at Manning Hall, Main Campus
Wednesday, April 2, 2008, 5:30 p.m.
Dr. Tuchscherer is Co-Director of the Bamum Scripts and Archives Project at the Royal Palace of Bamum Kings in Foumban, Cameroon. His lecture will explore Africa’s many writing traditions and historical scripts. He will concentrate on his work in Cameroon to preserve endangered archives and his research on the literary past of the Bamum inspired by the discovery of a hidden chest left by a royal Bamum scribe.
Co-sponsored by the Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology and the Friends of the Library of Brown University.
Brown Librarian picked to head Collaborative Initiative for French and North American Libraries
Dominique Coulombe, Senior Scholarly Resources Librarian, has been tapped to chair the steering committee for the Collaborative Initiative for French and North American Libraries (CIFNAL). CIFNAL promotes and facilitates the cooperative exchange of ideas and resources between French and North American libraries through a working group formed under the aegis of the Global Resources Network of the Center for Research Libraries (CRL). Though still in its nascent stages, the initiative is working to improve access to French and French language resources and encouraging partnerships and inter-library loan opportunities between complementary collections. Coulombe will work with a governing body of six other librarians to institute these programs and strengthen a spirit of cooperation between research institutions.
“It is exciting to see the francophone academic and research community join the ranks of the international initiatives supported by the Global Resources Network (GRN),” Coulombe said. “I am looking forward to developing projects and collaborating with French and North American libraries to expand and enhance access to francophone scholarly resources.”
For more information visit: http://www.crl.edu/grn/cifnal/index.asp
Looking at Jazz — Part 2, March 18 — The Harlem Renaissance
Part 2 of the series co-sponsored by the University Library and the Music Dept. will be this Sunday afternoon at 3:00 in Grant Recital Hall (behind Orwig). Sunday’s presentation will feature Brown faculty emeritus Ferd Jones introducing and leading discussion on the film The Harlem Renaissance. The film draws from “soundies” film and early television clips and features performances by Duke Ellington ,Len Horne, Fats Waller and others. This is a free event and no tickets are required.
Looking at Jazz: America’s Art Form is a free six-part film viewing, reading and discussion series. Brown is one of 50 institutions nationwide that were selected to participate in the project’s pilot program organized by Re:New Media in partnership with the American Library Association (ALA) and Jazz at Lincoln Center (JALC). The project is supported by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and by the Brown Department of Music and the Brown University Libraries.
For further information contact Ned Quist
Friedman Study Center earlier weekend opening
The Friedman Study Center will now open at 8 a.m. on Saturday and
Sunday.
http://dl.lib.brown.edu/libweb/hours.php
Notes of Praise, Notes of Dissent: Lincoln and his Political Career in Song
Orwig Music Library, March 2008
ยป Hours of Operation
Between 1860 and 1865, music about Abraham Lincoln proliferated. Lincoln appeared in campaign pieces, war and memorial numbers, emancipation songs, and minstrel music. Some songs lauded Lincoln, others lampooned him. Much more than simply suggesting 19th century musical fashions, Lincoln songs are an important source for understanding popular attitudes towards the 16th President and his policy agenda.
The exhibition displays materials from the Lincoln Collection at the John Hay Library and is part of the Library’s celebration of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial.
For more information contact orwig@brown.edu
Image: Union [pseudonym], “Vote for Abraham: Campaign Song of ’64″. Published at Burlington, Vermont by H. L. Story, 1864. Cover engraving by H. F. Greene, Boston.
Disturbances: An Exhibit of Select Materials from the Christine Dunlap Farnham Archives
Opening Reception: Thursday, March 13, 6:30 p.m.
John Hay Library, 20 Prospect Street
Providence, RI
Please join us for a reception celebrating the opening of the Christine Dunlap Farnham Archives Exhibit. The Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women is celebrating Women’s History Month 2008 with an exhibit at the John Hay Library at Brown. On display will be materials highlighting the historical achievements of Brown and Rhode Island women as well as documents tracing the intellectual gains made by feminist theorists working in universities across the country. Spanning several generations of activists and scholars, the collection recognizes the courage and intrepidity of women who dared to challenge and thereby disturb the status quo–through interrogation, agitation, and persistence.
Featured in the exhibit are the stories of such figures as Nancy Elizabeth Prophet, a Native-American/African American sculptor who battled with poverty as well as her own inner demons to create lasting works of art, and Annie Peck, who was refused admission to Brown in the 1870s but went on to become a celebrated mountaineer. The exhibit highlights the successful efforts of Sarah Doyle, the moving spirit behind the Rhode Island Society for the Collegiate Education of Women, and the highly controversial work of such feminist scholars as historians Joan Wallach Scott and Louise Tilly and literary scholars Naomi Schor and Elaine Marks. Each of these theorists questioned conventional approaches to knowledge and contributed to making gender and sexual difference crucial categories of analysis. On display will be artifacts bearing witness to the bold Pembroke College and Brown University women athletes who insisted on playing “men’s” sports such as hockey and activists who staged walk-outs to protest racial injustice on campus.
The exhibit runs from March 14 to April 9, 2008 and is free and open to the public during normal library opening hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday (except March 24-28, Brown’s spring break, when the library closes at 5 p.m.). The Library is also open on Sundays from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., except for March 23 and 30th.
RSVP by Friday, March 7, 2008 for the opening reception to: Pembroke_Associates@brown.edu or by calling (401) 863-3433. Kindly provide your name, class year if applicable, and number of guests.
This event is co-sponsored by the Friends of the Library and the Sarah Doyle Women’s Center.
More information:
http://www.pembrokecenter.org/associates/events.html
Audubon’s Slender Billed Guillemot on display
A volume of John James Audubon’s master work, The Birds of America, is on display on the main floor of the John Hay Library. Each plate will be on display for only one month. This month’s bird is the Slender Billed Guillemot. The library is open 9 to 6, Monday through Friday and Sundays between 1 and 5.
This elephant folio edition of The Birds of America, bound in six volumes, was presented by Albert E. Lownes to the Library on the occasion of his 50th class reunion in 1970.
For more information please contact Hay@brown.edu
Library Selected to Host Code4Lib 2009
Brown University Library has been selected to host Code4Lib 2009. Code4Lib is a vibrant community for sharing ideas about programming and technology in libraries. The Code4Lib conference, held in February, serves as a counterpoint to Canada’s Access conference, held in October. Code4Lib is a single track conference that was capped at 200 this year and filled up almost immediately. Members of the Code4Lib community vote on conference program presentations and on proposals to serve as host.
More information: http://code4lib.org/
Comments/Questions: libweb@brown.edu