Floriday folklife collection online

From: Elizabeth L. Brown (ebro@loc.gov)
Date: Fri Jul 28 2000 - 18:04:39 EDT

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    Sender: American Memory Fellows <AMFELLOWS@SUN8.LOC.GOV>
    Poster: "Elizabeth L. Brown" <ebro@LOC.GOV>
    Subject: Floriday folklife collection online
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    This announcement is being sent to a number of lists. Please accept our
    apologies for any duplicate posts.

    The American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress is proud to
    present its newest online collection: Florida Folklife from the WPA
    Collections.

    Florida Folklife from the WPA Collections is now available online
    through the Library of Congress American Memory Web site at the
    following URL:
    http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/flwpahtml/.

    The online presentation provides access to 376 sound recordings made in
    Florida in 1939-40 under the auspices of several government-funded arts
    projects. Using recording equipment loaned by the Archive of American
    Folk Song (now the American Folklife Center) at the Library of Congress,
    the WPA staff documented folktales, life histories, and sacred and
    secular music of cultures and communities throughout Florida. The
    recordings are augmented by 106 accompanying materials, including
    recording logs, song text transcriptions, correspondence between Florida
    WPA workers and Library of Congress personnel from 1937 to 1942, and an
    essay on Florida folklife by Zora Neale Hurston. The online presentation
    of these rich historic materials is made possible by the generous
    support of The Texaco Foundation.

    WPA staff traveled throughout twelve Florida counties with the Library's
    recording equipment in tow, collecting blues and work songs from
    menhaden fishing boats, railroad gangs, and turpentine camps; and
    children's songs, dance music, and religious music from schools, homes,
    and churches. They often interviewed the performers,
    documenting their lives as well as their folksongs. Links are provided
    from the Florida WPA collection to the American Life Histories:
    Manuscripts from the Federal Writers=92 Project, 1936-1940
    collection=ADalready available through the Library of Congress American
    Memory Web site=ADwhen a performer=92s life has been documented in writing
    as well as on acetate disk.

    Florida writer and folklorist Zora Neale Hurston, an editor for the
    Florida Federal Writers' Project from 1938-39, described pockets of rich
    cultural material in the state in her essay, "Proposed Recording
    Expedition into the Floridas," included with the online presentation.
    Hurston is also showcased as a performer, singing and
    explaining folksongs she learned in Florida and the Bahamas.

    A new essay by Stetson Kennedy, folklore editor for the Florida Writers=92
    Project, 1937-42, reflects on the labor and the legacy of the WPA in
    Florida. An extensive bibliography, a list of related Web sites, a map
    of the state, and a guide to the ethnic and language groups of Florida
    add further context to the New Deal era and to Florida culture.

    American Memory is a project of the National Digital Library Program of
    the Library of Congress, which, in collaboration with other
    institutions, is bringing important American historical materials to
    citizens around the world. Through American Memory, some eighty
    collections=ADincluding six based on materials created by the
    WPA=ADof digitized documents, photographs, recorded sound, motion
    pictures, and text are now available online, free to the public for
    educational purposes. This collection is the tenth collection from the
    American Folklife Center to be added to the American Memory Web site.
    All American Memory collections can be accessed through:
    http://memory.loc.gov.

    Please direct any questions to ndlpcoll@loc.gov.

      _________________________________________________________
                                                             =20
        Elizabeth L. Brown
        Automated Reference Services Librarian =20
        National Digital Library Program, LIBN/NDL/LC(1330) =20
        Library of Congress, Washington, DC 20540-1330 =20
        ebro@loc.gov telephone: 202/707-2235 =20
                                                             =20
        Library of Congress American Memory Home Page: =20
        http://memory.loc.gov/ =20
    _________________________________________________________



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