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Documenting Struggle Redux: Radical New York City Archives

Submitted by alycia on Sat, 04/03/2010 - 18:14

http://radicalreference.info/radicalarchivesredux

Radical Reference presents a second evening about how community history is documented and celebrated. Archivists and activists will present parts of their collections and discuss how their work keeps the struggle alive. (Details about our first "Documenting Struggle" can be found at http://radicalreference.info/radicalarchivesevent.)

Monday, April 26
7:30pm
Brecht Forum
451 West St (between Bank & Bethune Sts), NYC
$6/10/15 sliding scale (no one turned away)

* The Lesbian Herstory Archives http://www.lhef.org/) houses the world's largest and longest-lived -- 35 years old this year! --collection of materials by and about lesbians and their communities. Located in Park Slope, Brooklyn, the Archives has both print and non-print materials, including books, special collections, photographs, audio-visual aterials, t-shirts, banners, buttons, and more. Inspired by the courage of lesbians who lived, struggled, and loved in more difficult times, the Archives is governed by a group of volunteer coordinators and sustained by the collective work of volunteers and the passions of women the world over.

Deborah Edel is one of the co-founders of the Lesbian Herstory Archives and has been a onsistent volunteer since its inception. Not trained formally as a librarian or rchivist, she believes that her "on the job raining" has taught her a great deal about the field. It has also given her great respect for those who work professionally in the area and continue to bring their radical vision to their daily work.

* The Lower East Side Squatter-Homesteader archive Project was founded in 2003 by a group of former squatters and community members to create a comprehensive collection of documents pertaining to the Lower East Side homesteader/Squatter movement in the 1980s and 1990s. After struggling to secure homes for their families through four municipal governments over the last 25 years, losing over half their buildings, squatters attained "legal" status for their 12 remaining buildings in 2001. Though their struggle continues, this victory afforded an opportunity to consolidate a historical legacy in the form of a public archive, to be housed at NYU's Tamiment Library (library.nyu.edu/tamiment), that will provide primary information on the most remarkable urban housing movement of its kind in late 20th century U.S. history. For more information, email squat_archive@interactivist.net.

Matt Metzgar is a cabinetmaker who resided in Umbrella House Squat and, before their demise, in the 13th Street squats. Matt spent over 10 years living in and working on squatter buildings in the Lower East Side and New Orleans, participating in many squatter benefits as the drummer for Hooverville, a band born in 1988 in 537 East 13th St. He is the director and co-founder of the Lower East Side Squatter-Homesteader Archive Project.

Alan Ginsberg is an archivist and reference librarian. Alan has served as a project archivist and consultant for numerous organizations, ranging from the Woody Guthrie archives to managing records of a corporation that manufactures elevators and ball bearings. He is thrilled to serve as Consulting Archivist to the Lower East Side Squatter-Homesteader Archive Project.

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Alycia's favorite books »


Daily Reading Log

September 5, 2010

  • American Captivity Narratives for class, on the train on the way to and from working on the CHPCMA presentation. Sometimes you just can't read fast enough.

September 4, 2010

  • More work on the paper!

September 3, 2010

September 2, 2010

  • Not much reading, but lots of writing!

September 1, 2010

  • A truckload of materials from the archives about Jackie Eubanks and the Liberation Library.
  • I listened to Bill Moyers interview Jane Goodall on the way home.
  • Part of my homework, "How Indians Got to be Red," by Nancy Shoemaker.

August 31, 2010

  • I can not believe it is the last day of August already. Shortest summer break ever!
  • Lots of "alternative-media-turned-corporate-in-the-90s" articles

August 30, 2010

  • Research, research, research. Counterpoise, zine books, zine guru Dodge, and a mish-mash of other things.

August 29, 2010

  • Irwin Weintraub, "The Impact of Alternative Presses on Scientific Communication"
  • Dr. John Van Hook, "The Selection of Alternative Materials: Building a Library Collection"

August 28, 2010

  • Anna H. Perrault, "The Changing Print Resource Base of Academic Libraries in the United States"
  • Angela Brookens and Alan Poulter, "Support for Alternative Publishing by Public Libraries in Scotland"
  • I won the first round.

August 27, 2010

Further down the rabbit hole:

  • Daniel C. Tsang, "The Alternative Media: Open Sources on What's Real."
  • Sanford Berman, "Where It's At."

August 26, 2010

  • First day of "Save the World on Your Own Time: The Rhetorics of Advocacy." We read through a few definitions of rhetoric, and a few examples of advocacy (from 8.5x15 photocopy mash-ups), and then I read "The Cooling Out Function in Higher Education" by Burton R. Clark on the way home--because Ira Shor prints out the readings for us each week.

August 25, 2010

  • I don't know how, but I always forget just how hectic these first few days of each school year can be. Graduate students were orientated! In a room too small to hold them all!
  • I listened to some of the Fresh Air episode on advertisement surveillance online, and Democracy Now!, and fretted over consumerism on my way home today.

August 24, 2010

  • Today was Orientation at my campus for undergraduates. I made a zine, copied a zillion handouts, and had fun meeting new students. Which utterly wiped me out for any other reading.

August 23, 2010

  • Danky, as found in "An Alternative Vision of Librarianship: James Danky and the Sociocultural Politics of Collection Development" by Juris Dilevko in the Dankyfest issue of Library Trends:
    • We check off the books sent on centralized approval plans, replicate the cataloging others have done (frequently without the complete book in hand), and then answer our patrons’ questions with information from commercial databases.
  • Kiss My Filing Indicators

August 22, 2010

  • A Passage for Dissent: The Best of Sipapu, 1970-1988
    • Noel Peattie on the word Sipapu: “For me, who chanced on the word, only dimly understanding its significance, it’s a personal message… If I have borrowed the term unfairly, at least I made my Sipapu a place of emergence for others: contributors, poets, and raisers of issues...