15 Bookmarks Found with These Tags:

Archival-Materials [X]
History [X]
African-American Women: A Selected Bibliography of LSU Resources
Includes the following aspects: [Arts] [Bibliographies] [Biographies and Autobiographies] [Feminism] [General] [Health] [History] [Interviews and Oral Histories] [Juvenile Literature] [Literature and Drama] [Quotations] [Reference Works]
Bridgett Demery Jackson Brister oral history interview, 1997
by Brister, Bridgett Demery Jackson
Conversations with Maya Angelou
Angelou, Maya
Conversations with Nikki Giovanni
Giovanni, Nikki
Conversations with Toni Morrison
Morrison, Toni
In the First Person is a free, high quality, professionally published, in-depth index of close to 4,000 collections of personal narratives in English from around the world. Available through LSU Middleton Libraries
LSU Libraries Special Collection Subject Guide to Manuscript Collection -- Women's History
Manuscript Resources on Women's History in the Louisiana and Lower Mississippi Valley Collections, Special Collections, LSU Libraries
Mary Edith Moody oral history interview, 2002
Moody, Mary Edith, 1926-
NYPL Digital Gallery provides free and open access to over 700,000 images digitized from the The New York Public Library's vast collections, including illuminated manuscripts, historical maps, vintage posters, rare prints, photographs and more.
Johnson, Elondust Patrick, 1967-
Hill, Ruth Edmonds
The Nineteenth Century Index – the most comprehensive and dynamic source for discovering nineteenth-century books, periodicals, official documents, newspapers and archives.
Morrison, Toni
LexisNexis UPA Collections consist of documentary research collections in microfilm, microfiche, print, and digital formats. These titles have been produced from some of the most important manuscript and archival repositories in the world, including the National Archives, Library of Congress, Public Record Office in London, University of North Carolina’s Southern Historical Collection, the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture at the New York Public Library, and the Presidential Libraries of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Dwight Eisenhower, Harry Truman, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, and George Bush.

