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    1. STUDIES IN CHAOS · An "Open Mesh of Possibilities": Thinking Queerness with Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick’s

      Untitled (For beauty is a series of hypothesis – Suminagashi) . No Date. This textile piece features text from Marcel Proust on fabric (...)

    2. POLYP AND LOOM BOOK · An "Open Mesh of Possibilities": Thinking Queerness with Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick

      Circa 2005. This dyed textile piece was designed to resemble a sea anemone or coral polyp.

    3. Business & Labor - Women's History Manuscript Collections at the Rubenstein Library - LibGuides at D

      Materials contain general information on women in industry as well as information on organizations and unions in which women play a major role (...)

    4. We Call Them "Naked Bindings" - Preservation Underground

      Why does this binding work for this book? The book is about a textile exhibit. The exposed threads, multi-colored thread choice, and (...)

    5. Labor, Industry, and Commerce - Durham and Local History at the Rubenstein Library - LibGuides at Du

      The labor section looks at labor activism from Durham's textile mills in the early 20th century to organizers working with immigrant (...)

    6. Southeast Women’s Employment Coalition Records, 1868-1991 · Women and Labor Movements · Duke Univers

      It showcases important collections including the records of the International Ladies Garment Workers Unions, the papers of Durham activist (...)

    7. When Items Keep Getting Bigger - Preservation Underground

      The broken remains of another had been wrapped in a thin textile and tied onto the parchment strip with string.

    8. Preservation Underground - Page 20 of 58 - Duke University Libraries Preservation

      The head, tail, and fore-edge of the lid have black woven textile straps and bone pins, which originally fastened to small woven (...)

    9. Preservation Underground - Page 21 of 59 - Duke University Libraries Preservation

      The head, tail, and fore-edge of the lid have black woven textile straps and bone pins, which originally fastened to small woven (...)

    10. Margaret Bryan 1756-1837 · The Scientific Vision of Women · Duke University Library Exhibits

      Margaret was born in West Ham, Essex, the daughter of a textile merchant and her maternal grandfather was an apothecary.

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