Website Search Results

    Page 2 of 296 website results

    1. Movement History Initiative | Duke University Libraries

      Support the MHI Support Staff - $20,000 annually Under the guidance of the MHI Coordinator, MHI support staff will help create digital content (...)

    2. Full Frame Archive at the Rubenstein Library | Duke University Libraries

      The Archive serves as a catalyst for individual transformation, interdisciplinary scholarship, critical discussion and social (...)

    3. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/rubenstein/pdf/WomensSuffrage.pdf

      Considered the largest reform movement in United States history, its participants believed that securing the vote was essential to achieving (...)

    4. Microsoft Word - KBD_Doctor’sStories_ArchivalExpeditionsModule_LessonPlan.docx

      Microsoft Word - KBD_Doctor’sStories_ArchivalExpeditionsModule_LessonPlan.docx Dimitriadis | 1 This work is licensed under the Creative (...)

    5. Women at the Center - Issue 7, Spring 2005

      Bobbye and Viki’s shared social values and political beliefs are well-reflected in their pa- pers.

    6. Women at the Center - Issue 28, Fall 2015

      Segrest's enormous resolve and courage, and my time with her papers has in- creased my appreciation of her work and her dedication to (...)

    7. Women at the Center - Issue 25, Spring 2014

      Her collec- tion documents her work as a grassroots organizer and social jus- tice activist.

    8. Women at the Center - Issue 14, Fall 2008

      Later the class came to Perkins Library to work with materials first hand. Professor Eagle writes of this experi­ ence, “Engagement (...)

    9. Women at the Center - Issue 6, Summer 2004

      A slideshow of images from issues of Evergreen Review (see illustration at right) as well as the manifesto and other items from Morgan's papers (...)

    10. Mary Lily Research Grant Recipients | Duke University Libraries

      Amy Minton , for work on her dissertation, which examines the concept of respectability and Southern social relations in the (...)

    More Search Options