Slave Narratives Collection (typescripts) online!

From: Elizabeth L. Brown (ebro@loc.gov)
Date: Mon Apr 02 2001 - 17:35:59 EDT

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    Sender: American Memory Fellows <AMFELLOWS@SUN8.LOC.GOV>
    Poster: "Elizabeth L. Brown" <ebro@LOC.GOV>
    Subject: Slave Narratives Collection (typescripts) online!
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    This announcement is being sent to a number of lists. Please accept our
    apologies for any duplicate postings.

    The Library of Congress National Digital Library Program announces the
    release of the online collection, "Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives
    from the Federal Writers' Project, 1936-1938, at the American Memory Web
    site at: <http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/snhtml/>.

    "Born in Slavery" is a joint presentation of the Manuscript and Prints
    and Photographs Divisions of the Library of Congress. More than 2,300
    first-person accounts of slavery comprising over 9,500 page images with
    searchable text, bibliographic records and 500 black-and-white
    photographs of former slaves are now available. More than 200
    photographs are included from the Prints and Photographs Division that
    are now made available to the public for the first time. The
    photographs of former slaves are linked to their corresponding
    narratives.

    The Federal Writers' Project (FWP) originally made no plans for
    collecting slave autobiographies and reminiscences. Interviews with
    former slaves were undertaken spontaneously after the inception of the
    FWP and were included among the activities of several Southern Writers'
    Projects for almost a year before these isolated efforts were
    transformed into a concerted regional project, coordinated by the
    national headquarters of the FWP in Washington, D.C. On April 1, 1937,
    the collection of slave narratives formally began with the dispatch of
    instructions to all Southern and border states directing their Writers'
    Project workers to the task of interviewing former slaves. Today, the
    Slave Narrative Collection provides a unique and virtually unsurpassed
    collective portrait of a historical population.

    This online collection features an extensive introductory essay by
    Norman R. Yetman of the University of Kansas which includes information
    about the interviewers, the people interviewed, and the processes of
    collection and compilation, as well as a wealth of fascinating stories
    and candid portraits of former slaves. The digitization of the
    collection was made possible by a major gift from the Citigroup
    Foundation.

    Please direct any questions to ndlpcoll@loc.gov



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