Inventory of the Bobbye S. Ortiz Papers,
1919-1993 and undated (bulk
1950-1990)
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Descriptive Summary
Title
Bobbye S. Ortiz Papers,
1919-1993 and
undated (bulk
1950-1990)
Creator
Ortiz, Bobbye S.
Extent
30.4 Linear Feet
12,430 Items
Repository
Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library, Duke
University
Language
English.
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Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
Parts of the collection are closed to research.
In addition, some of the materials in this collection are not
immediately accessible because they require further processing before use (see
the finding aid for details).
Please contact Research Services staff before visiting the Rare
Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library to use this collection.
Use Restrictions
The copyright interests in this collection have not been transferred
to Duke University. For more information, consult the copyright section of the
Regulations and Procedures of the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special
Collections Library.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], Bobbye S. Ortiz Papers, Rare Book,
Manuscript, and Special Collections Library, Duke University.
Provenance
The papers of Bobbye S. Ortiz were received by the Rare Book,
Manuscript, and Special Collections Library as gifts from her daughter Victoria
Ortiz in 1992, 1994, and 2003.
Processing Information
Processed by Virginia L. Daley, Paula Jeannet Mangiafico, Ann
Langford, Lois Schultz, Pavla Vesel, and Elizabeth Arnold
Completed March 2, 2000 and September 10, 2003
Accessions 92-077 and 94-082 were merged into one collection,
described in this finding aid. Part of the 2003-065 accession of the Victoria
Ortiz Papers has also been added to this collection in September, 2003, but has
not been fully processed as most of it is closed to use.
This finding aid is NCEAD compliant.
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Biographical Note
1918, July 2 | Born in Memphis, Tenn. |
1928-1929 | Attended Lockhart-Moore Academy, Little Rock, Ark. |
1929-1930 | Attended Fassifern School, Hendersonville, N.C. |
1930-1932 | Attended Kidd-Key College and Conservatory, Sherman,
Tex. |
1932-1933 | Henderson State Teachers College, Arkadelphia, Ark. |
1933-1935 | Undergraduate at Barnard College at age 15 |
1935-1937 | University of Chicago |
1939-1944 | Lived in Mexico |
1939 | Married to Robert G. Colodny, separated 1940 |
1940-1952 | Married to Cesar Ortiz |
1942, May 6 | Daughter Victoria born |
1951-1953 | Studied at the Sorbonne, Paris and traveled extensively in
Europe |
1953-1956 | Lived in England |
1957 | Returned to United States |
1960 | B.A. in Spanish, New York University |
1963 | M.A. in Spanish, New York University |
1963, Fall | Teaching assistant in Spanish, NYU |
1968-1983 | Associate Editor,
Monthly Review |
1979 | Co-founder of WIRE (Women's International Resource
Exchange) |
1989 | Awarded the Arthur J. Felberbaum Award from the New York
Marxist School |
1990, June 15 | Died, New York City |
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Collection Overview
The papers of feminist and social activist
Bobbye Ortiz span from the years 1919 to 1993,
with most of the papers being dated between 1950 and 1990. The papers consist
chiefly of personal correspondence; extensive subject files on international
political and cultural movements;
photographs and
slides; ephemeral publication material such as
grassroots
newsletters,
pamphlets,
broadsides, and
clippings; cultural artifacts, including buttons
and T-shirts; and over 300
sound recordings of spoken voice and music. The
collection documents the personal life and career of an international feminist,
Marxist activist, and mother, who also served as editor of the magazine
Monthly Review and was the founder of the
organization WIRE (Women's International Resource Exchange). Other personal
documents and subject files concern the activities of Bobbye's daughter, Viki
Ortiz, an activist in her own right. The materials in both women's files are
especially rich in the history of the international
women's liberation movement and other revolutionary
movements in
Europe,
Latin America, and other countries during the
sixties, seventies, and eighties. Many of these materials focus on politics and
government in
Cuba,
China, and
France. Other topics include
Vietnam War protests; students' movements,
particularly
Paris, 1968; indigenous women's movements in
Latin America; AIDS activism;
sexual health;
adoption rights;
gay and lesbian parenting; and women's issues such as
reproductive rights, economic status, and
violence against women.
The Correspondence Series is almost
completely CLOSED to research; see the inventory below for more information.
Most materials in other series, however, are open for research.
The Personal Files Series focuses on
Ortiz's formal education, particularly her coursework at
New York University. Other highlights of the
series include Ortiz's
scrapbook from her tour of
China, which is further documented by
audio tapes and
photographs in the collection. Writings folders
include notes, short articles, and
speeches written by Ortiz as well as a
collection of poetry by
Grace Goldin, a friend of Ortiz. Two folders
contain photocopies of inscriptions from many authors found inside the volumes
in her personal library (now in the Perkins Library stacks of Duke University).
This series is partially CLOSED.
The Subject Files Series has been separated
into two main subseries: one devoted to
international women's liberation and one for general
topics. In the International Women's Liberation Subseries,
Ortiz maintained extensive files on the status of women and
women's liberation campaigns around the world. The
grassroots organizational publications (many of them ephemeral in nature),
news clippings, and
articles found in the
international women's liberation subseries address
such issues as
women's economic status, their roles in the family,
violence against women,
reproductive rights and
sexuality, and
indigenous women's movements. The most extensive
segments of the subseries deal with
women's liberation in the 1970s and 1980s in
Chile,
Cuba, the
Dominican Republic,
El Salvador,
Eritrea,
Guatemala,
Mexico,
Nicaragua, and the
United States. The subseries is organized
alphabetically by country.
The General Files Subseries consists mainly
of
articles, notes, and
periodicals from the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.
Especially noteworthy are notes and other papers related to Ortiz's work as
associate editor of the
Monthly Review, though these provide only
a limited glimpse into her decades of service there. The subseries also
contains materials related to health,
cancer, and the
right-to-die movement;
feminism,
women's liberation, and the
Women's International Resource Exchange (WIRE); and
the political turmoil of
Paris 1968. Together, Ortiz's subject files reflect
the directions of her activism in the final decades of her life.
The Photographs and Slides Series contains
portraits of individuals and groups, photographs taken during tours of
countries and political events, and miscellaneous casual snapshots. There are
very fine
portraits of native peoples taken by well-known
activist
Gertrude Duby Blom. The largest segment of the
series documents Ortiz's trips to
China in 1974 and
Latin America (ca. 1984). For related materials,
see the Audio Tapes Series and the
Personal Files Series. There are also
audio cassettes recorded in
Latin America and
Nicaragua, which may correspond with slides in the
Photographs and Slides Series. This series ends with photo negatives of an
International Women's Day March in 1978.
Note: This series is restricted. Use copies must be made
of any cassettes without use copies already made. Please consult with reference
staff.
Posters,
buttons, and T-shirts bearing slogans and vivid
images were vital components of the many social movements in which both Bobbye
and Victoria Ortiz participated. The Cultural Artifacts
Series captures the political use of popular culture in the late 20th
century by preserving a representative sample of these cultural artifacts. The
selections reflect Bobbye and Viki's participation in social movements
concerned with issues such as U.S. imperialism in
Latin America,
international women's liberation,
AIDS, and
lesbian and gay rights. The series also contains
original artwork done for Bobbye and Viki, as well as
art posters from France. Several oversize
posters are artifacts from the French
worker/student strikes of 1968.
The majority of tapes in the Audio Tapes Series
are cassette recordings of tours taken by Bobbye Ortiz during her
travels in
China and
Latin America. Additional tapes include
recordings of radio programs, interviews, and readings related to Bobbye's
activism. Descriptive notes on many of the tapes
listed below have been included as an appendix to this inventory. Note: This series is restricted. Use copies must be made of any
cassettes without use copies already made. Please consult with reference
staff. Related material about these trips may also be found in the
Photographs and Slides Series and
Personal Files Series.
The complete holdings of Bobbye Ortiz's library, which were donated as
part of this collection and reside in Perkins Library at Duke University, are
represented by the hand-written Index Card Catalog Series.
The hundreds of
Monthly Review Press publications in the library
are one of the few records in the Ortiz Collection of her work for over twenty
years as associate editor of the
Monthly Review. The range of topics
covered by her library -- women,
Marxism and
socialism,
literature,
Central America,
Latin America,
Asia, social sciences, humanities -- reveals the
breadth of her intellectual interests and their intimate connections to her
political concerns. The catalog is organized by topic, alphabetically by author
therein.
The Phonograph Records Series features
sound recordings on 33 1/3, 45, and 78 LPs collected by Bobbye Ortiz during her
travels. Hundreds of
folk music recordings, protest and labor song
collections, and miscellaneous spoken word recordings date from the 1960s to
the 1980s. Recording artists include many well-known musicians as well as
hundreds of other musicians interested in folk, labor, and protest music; major
languages represented include Spanish, French, and Italian. Many of these
recordings are now out of print and difficult to find. This
series is restricted: use copies must be made in order to access the
recordings. For assistance, please contact the reference staff.
The addition (Acc.# 2003-0065) is minimally processed. It consists
largely of photographs and negatives (approximately 550 prints, 120 negatives,
and 1 slide, color and black-and-white), documenting Ortiz's travels to various
locations including Cuba, Nicaragua, China, Mexico, the Dominican Republic, and
Europe (1968-[1980s]). Also included are publication files related to WIRE
(Women's International Resource Exchange), a few pieces of correspondence, and
other miscellaneous personal items. Boxes 2 and 3, containing photographs,
correspondence, and personal items, are CLOSED to research. Box 1 is open to
research. No container list was created for this accession.
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Subject Headings
These are searchable subject entries for this collection. Performing a
search on these subjects in the Duke University Libraries online catalog will
bring up other related research materials.
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Ortiz, Bobbye S.
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Ortiz, Victoria.
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Monthly Review (New York,
1949-).
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WIRE (Women's International Resource Exchange).
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Feminism.
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Feminists--Correspondence.
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Women--Social conditions.
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Women's periodicals.
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Social activists--Correspondence.
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Radicalism--United States--History--20th century.
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Social movements--United States--History--20th
century.
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Nineteen sixties.
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Communism.
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Civil rights movement--Mississippi.
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Adoption.
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Vietnamese Conflict, 1961-1975--Protest movements.
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Mothers and daughters.
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Cuba--History--Revolution, 1959.
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China--Social conditions.
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Central America--Social conditions.
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Mexico--Social conditions.
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Latin America--Social conditions--1948.
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South America--Social conditions.
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Italy--Social conditions.
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Student movements--France.
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Indigenous peoples--Portraits.
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Folk music.
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Protest songs.
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Scrapbooks.
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Photographs.
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Slides.
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Posters.