Website Search Results
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STUDIES IN CHAOS · An "Open Mesh of Possibilities": Thinking Queerness with Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick’s
https://exhibits.library.duke.edu/exhibits/show/eks/chaos
Untitled (For beauty is a series of hypothesis – Suminagashi) . No Date. This textile piece features text from Marcel Proust on fabric (...)
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POLYP AND LOOM BOOK · An "Open Mesh of Possibilities": Thinking Queerness with Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick
https://exhibits.library.duke.edu/exhibits/show/eks/pedestals
Circa 2005. This dyed textile piece was designed to resemble a sea anemone or coral polyp.
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Business & Labor - Women's History Manuscript Collections at the Rubenstein Library - LibGuides at D
https://guides.library.duke.edu/womenshistory/labor
Materials contain general information on women in industry as well as information on organizations and unions in which women play a major role (...)
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We Call Them "Naked Bindings" - Preservation Underground
https://blogs.library.duke.edu/preservation/2020/03/05/we-call-them-naked/
Why does this binding work for this book? The book is about a textile exhibit. The exposed threads, multi-colored thread choice, and (...)
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Labor, Industry, and Commerce - Durham and Local History at the Rubenstein Library - LibGuides at Du
https://guides.library.duke.edu/c.php?g=289953&p=1931913
The labor section looks at labor activism from Durham's textile mills in the early 20th century to organizers working with immigrant (...)
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Southeast Women’s Employment Coalition Records, 1868-1991 · Women and Labor Movements · Duke Univers
https://exhibits.library.duke.edu/exhibits/show/womenandlabor/collections/spec
It showcases important collections including the records of the International Ladies Garment Workers Unions, the papers of Durham activist (...)
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When Items Keep Getting Bigger - Preservation Underground
https://blogs.library.duke.edu/preservation/2024/06/06/bigger-collections/
The broken remains of another had been wrapped in a thin textile and tied onto the parchment strip with string.
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Preservation Underground - Page 20 of 58 - Duke University Libraries Preservation
https://blogs.library.duke.edu/preservation/page/20/
The head, tail, and fore-edge of the lid have black woven textile straps and bone pins, which originally fastened to small woven (...)
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Preservation Underground - Page 21 of 59 - Duke University Libraries Preservation
https://blogs.library.duke.edu/preservation/page/21/
The head, tail, and fore-edge of the lid have black woven textile straps and bone pins, which originally fastened to small woven (...)
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Margaret Bryan 1756-1837 · The Scientific Vision of Women · Duke University Library Exhibits
https://exhibits.library.duke.edu/exhibits/show/2024sciencewomen/women/mbryan
Margaret was born in West Ham, Essex, the daughter of a textile merchant and her maternal grandfather was an apothecary.