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    1. 2023 Black Lives in Archives - Black Lives in Archives - Rubenstein Library Immersive Event - LibGui

      Davis gave in her “Recurring Philosophical Themes in Black Literature course at UCLA during the fall quarter of 1969. Narrative of (...)

    2. What to Read this Month: September 2017 - Duke University Libraries Blogs

      Massey is known for her columns and criticism, and you can read a review of this, her first book, here  and check out an interview with (...)

    3. "The Red Cape": Film Screening and Discussion with Director Nelson Oliver, Apr. 18 - Duke University

      Chesnutt, The Marrow of Tradition: Authoritative Text, Contexts, Criticism Speller Street Films, Wilmington on Fire Leon Prather, We (...)

    4. Poetry - Native North American Voices - LibGuides at Duke University

      With touches of humor and the occasional sharp cultural criticism, the voice that emerges from these poems is that of a Dakota woman (...)

    5. Archival Collections - Student Activism at Duke University - LibGuides at Duke University

      Duke's Center for Sexual and Gender Diversity provides this narrative history and timeline of Duke's LGBTQ history .

    6. Yiddish - Jewish Studies - LibGuides at Duke University

      Today, a modest body of novels, short stories, poems and essays by Yiddish women may be found in English translation online and in print, and (...)

    7. What to Read this Month: September 2020 - Duke University Libraries Blogs

      As a “blend of reporting, cultural criticism, and memoir,” she also reports on the experiences of other asexual people of various (...)

    8. Islamic Studies - Middle East & Islamic Studies - LibGuides at Duke University

      Islamic Movements: Self-Criticism and Reconsideration (Rashid Ghannoushi) 17.

    9. 2012 February

      Keichel admits a possible Boston-centric criticism and no doubt many will decry various omissions but as a reader I find the lack of (...)

    10. https://sites.fuqua.duke.edu/fordlibrary/page/41/

      Keichel admits a possible Boston-centric criticism and no doubt many will decry various omissions but as a reader I find the lack of (...)

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