Fall 2009

Volume 23, No. 1

Fall 2009 cover image

Notes

Exhibits | Events | and more...

Notes

Collections Highlight

Ethiopic Manuscripts at Duke

Collections Highlight: Ethiopic Manuscripts at Duke

The Story of Two Books

The Writing of 444 Days: The Hostages Remember and Guests of the Ayatollah

The Story of Two Books

Fall 2009 issue

Notes
Knowledge Bytes
The Story of Two Books
The Writing of 444 Days: The Hostages Remember and Guests of the Ayatollah
Digital Collections at Duke
Five articles on the Digital Collections program at Duke University Libraries.
Collections Highlight
Ethiopic Manuscripts at Duke

Exhibits – Fall 2007

The Perkins Gallery remains closed for renovation until August 2008.

Special Collections Gallery

Picturing Home: Family Albums as Historical MemoirAugust/October
Picturing Home: Family Albums as Historical Memoir
This evocative exhibit documents the history of four generations of the Davis family of Hampton, Virginia. Chloe Tarrant Campbell created the first photography album in the 1870s prior to moving from Alabama to Mississippi. Her daughter, granddaughter, and great-granddaughters continued the photographic tradition, creating a rich record of African American life from Reconstruction to the civil rights movement. The exhibit, which traces the maternal line of Chapel Hill donor Louise Davis Stone, is drawn from the Davis Family Papers Collection.

Louise Davis Stone: Duke University Photography “I’m impressed by what collections can teach someone who has no knowledge of black middle class life. White people don’t know our aspirations, goals and gracious living. It’s about dispelling stereotypes. We had a life. We still have a life. We enjoyed the creature comforts despite segregation and racism.”

–Louise Davis Stone


Image from Driftless: Photographs from IowaNovember/December
Driftless: Photographs from Iowa
Black-and-white photographs by Danny Wilcox Frazier of a contemporary rural Iowa of vanishing towns and transformed landscapes. As viewers study these images, they will also see what is happening in many other parts of the United States. A version of this exhibit is available online.

Hours for the Special Collections Gallery: Monday-Saturday, 9am-9pm, and 10am-9pm on Sunday. Call 919.660.5968 or visit http://library.duke.edu/exhibits/ for more information.

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