Entering Howard University’s Moorland-Spingarn Research Center, one still passes through the “catalog room,” an antechamber filled with rows of card drawers. Inaugurated in 1930 by librarian Dorothy Porter, this catalog of the “Negro Collection” served for much of the twentieth century as one of the only extant portals to African American print culture. This article reconstructs the creation of that catalog in order to chart the relationship between infrastructure and racial imaginaries of reading. Porter contravened the routine misfiling of blackness in prevailing information systems by rewriting Dewey decimals, creating new taxonomies for black print, and fielding research inquiries from across the diaspora. She built public access to...
From 1930 to 1935 the Julius Rosenwald Fund supported eleven county library demonstrations in the So...
This article presents the results of a preliminary study to examine the cataloging and classificatio...
Using Critical Race Theory (CRT) as an analytical framework, this chapter explores the development o...
Collecting Race argues that Black writers in the twentieth century theorized Black archives as new w...
This essay places at the center of twentieth-century African American knowledge production the libra...
The work of preserving content is at the heart of what libraries and archives do best. Beyond preser...
Whether the library in question is as small as a personal collection of books or as large as the Bor...
This dissertation radically reframes the library and information discourse on the African American l...
Using the life and work of Arna Bontemps as a case in point, Thompson examines the relationship betw...
From the white editorial authentication of slave narratives, to the cultural hybridity of the Harlem...
The Black Bibliography Project (BBP) plans to produce a bibliographic database of printed works by B...
In a Journal of Academic Librarianship article that appeared in 2000, Susan A. Vega García writes ab...
On November 26, 2000, friends and colleagues gathered at Saint Stephens Episcopal Church to honor th...
A bibliography created to accompany a display in honor of Black History Month at the Leatherby Libra...
This essay examines the seminal reference tool, African-American Newspapers and Periodicals: A Nati...
From 1930 to 1935 the Julius Rosenwald Fund supported eleven county library demonstrations in the So...
This article presents the results of a preliminary study to examine the cataloging and classificatio...
Using Critical Race Theory (CRT) as an analytical framework, this chapter explores the development o...
Collecting Race argues that Black writers in the twentieth century theorized Black archives as new w...
This essay places at the center of twentieth-century African American knowledge production the libra...
The work of preserving content is at the heart of what libraries and archives do best. Beyond preser...
Whether the library in question is as small as a personal collection of books or as large as the Bor...
This dissertation radically reframes the library and information discourse on the African American l...
Using the life and work of Arna Bontemps as a case in point, Thompson examines the relationship betw...
From the white editorial authentication of slave narratives, to the cultural hybridity of the Harlem...
The Black Bibliography Project (BBP) plans to produce a bibliographic database of printed works by B...
In a Journal of Academic Librarianship article that appeared in 2000, Susan A. Vega García writes ab...
On November 26, 2000, friends and colleagues gathered at Saint Stephens Episcopal Church to honor th...
A bibliography created to accompany a display in honor of Black History Month at the Leatherby Libra...
This essay examines the seminal reference tool, African-American Newspapers and Periodicals: A Nati...
From 1930 to 1935 the Julius Rosenwald Fund supported eleven county library demonstrations in the So...
This article presents the results of a preliminary study to examine the cataloging and classificatio...
Using Critical Race Theory (CRT) as an analytical framework, this chapter explores the development o...