Collections : [University of Michigan Special Collections Research Center]

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26.5 Linear Feet — 26 records center boxes and 1 oversize flat file

David Cope is a poet in the Objectivist tradition and the founder of Nada Press, a small press which publishes the literary magazine and other poetry. Cope, a University of Michigan graduate and lifelong Michigan resident, taught literature and writing at Grand Rapids Community College and Western Michigan University. The collection documents Cope's writing, editing, and to some extent teaching and other spheres of Cope's life, through correspondence, manuscripts, notes, printed material, photographs, and videotapes.

David Cope made his first donation of papers to the Special Collections Research Center in 1987. Since then he has continued to make frequent contributions. The David Cope Papers cover Cope's writing and correspondence from the 1970s to the present, as well as his editing and teaching activities. In addition to offering insight into Cope's work, the collection details some of the activities and thoughts of friends and fellow writers and poets; in particular, Allen Ginsberg, Jim Cohn, Antler, and Jeff Poniewaz. Not currently well-documented are the more personal aspects of Cope's life--especially his family life--except for those details made available through his writings and correspondence.

The David Cope Papers are divided into eight series: Correspondence and Name Files, Writings, Editing Materials, Teaching and Education Materials, Publicity Materials, Personal, Photographs, and Audio/Visual. A small selection of books from Cope's library have been removed from the collection and have been cataloged individually. They are shelved by call number in Special Collections and can be requested through the Library's catalog.

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Correspondence and Name Files

The Correspondence and Name File series consists of correspondence and writings from those in David Cope's circle. Writings range from handwritten drafts to typescripts to photocopies of published work. Materials in this series are arranged alphabetically. Although the bulk of the material in the series is correspondence, manuscripts and other material created by or related to the person listed may also be found in the files. In cases where large amounts of material related to a person exist in the collection, the type of material has been grouped by genre and is indicated separately in the finding aid. In cases where the type of material is not listed separately, the file contains mainly correspondence, but may also include small amounts of other material, most likely manuscripts. Much of the correspondence, in fact, includes manuscript enclosures. This is particularly the case for the files of frequent correspondents such as Antler, Jeff Poniewaz, Jim Cohn, Bob Rixon, and to a lesser extent, Allen Ginsberg. The researcher should note that some manuscripts submitted to Cope, plus a small amount of correspondence related to Cope's editing and publishing activities, are to be found in the Writing series and Editing Materials series.

1 Linear Foot — 1 Record Box

The Suzanne Kessler Papers consist of documents created by Suzanne Kessler related to her research and work about gender socialization and medical treatment of intersex individuals as children. This collection spans Kessler's work from 1985 - 2010. Early interviews with physicians were are dated from 1985-1986. Correspondence with individuals and intersex activist groups are dated 1989-1999. Audio recordings are stored on two cassette tapes and one DVD.

The Suzanne Kessler Papers are arranged in folders with no series or subseries. Box 1 of 1 contains interview transcriptions, correspondence interviews, media and professional publications, and presentation transparencies.

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1.5 Linear Feet — genreform: 35 photographs in Box 1 — genreform: 12 videotapes in Box 3

Ann Arbor, Michigan artist, invited to curate show on pornography and prostitution in conjunction with University of Michigan Law School on the subject. Speakers, including Catherine MacKinnon and Andrea Dworkin, generally opposed pornography and prostitution while artists argued for freedom of expression legalization and legalization of prostitution. Removal of a videotape from the exhibit resulted in controversy and legal action. Includes materials from the exhibit, correspondence, conference files, photos and videotapes.

The records in the Carol Jacobsen Collection are compromised of materials documenting the "Porn I'mage'ry" exhibit, the controversy and negotiations surrounding the exhibit, and materials concerning the issues of prostitution, pornography, sex work, and censorship. The records are organized into six series: Correspondence Files, Press Clippings and Published Material Files, Original Conference Files, Photographs, Protest and Reinstallation Material, and Videotapes.

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Correspondence Files, 1992-1994

The Correspondence Files series, 1992-1995 consists of Jacobsen's correspondence regarding the exhibit and the controversy. Major correspondents in the files include Marjorie Heins of the ACLU and Dean Lee Bollinger of the University of Michigan Law School.

.5 Linear Feet — 1 manuscript box — Archival material separated out from larger donation from the late David Porter. — Papers are fragile and sometimes torn. Rusty staples have been removed where possible.

Research materials created and collected by the political scientist David Porter during the course of his doctoral research in Algeria.

The bulk of the papers is Porter's own handwritten notes, but also includes materials he saved from other sources (such as local newspapers) and typewritten proposals presented by Porter to his dissertation committee. The papers remain in Porter's original order. Porter's research focused on socialist and anarchist forces in Algeria immediately following independence. Materials are in both French and English.

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Collection

David Porter Papers, (majority within 1960-1980)

.5 Linear Feet — 1 manuscript box — Archival material separated out from larger donation from the late David Porter. — Papers are fragile and sometimes torn. Rusty staples have been removed where possible.

0.5 Linear Feet — One manuscript box

The collection contains a series of letters from Robert "Ed" Stover to William "Bill" Goring, his lawyer and confidante. The bulk of the letters are from Stover's incarceration in San Quentin prison, where he died in 1974.

The letters consist primarily of hand-written letters from Stover to Goring, but also included are photocopies of Goring's letters to Stover. Also included are some note- and postcards, as well as several newsletters and other serialized mailers. Newspaper clippings shared between the two men are also included, as well as photocopies of a document titled "Notebook of a Convict in the Alameda County Jail."

Materials are generally arranged chronologically.

65 Linear Feet — 147 hollinger boxes,2 cassette boxes, 2 small oversize boxes, 3 flat portfolios, 3 oversize folders.

Eleanor Leacock was a prominant marxist/feminist anthropologist active from the 1940s to the late 1980s. Her area of focus was social and gender relations, feminist theory, and racism in American education. During her career she conducted multiple studies and field work, most prominantly the work she did with the Innu of Labrador Canada. Her collection includes materials related to her various studies and field work, publictions and teaching career, areas of research, and a small portion of family/personal materials. The collection ranges from 1915 to 1987, but most of the collection spans from the 1940s to the 1970s. Notable materials are the field notes and research materials from her field studies in Zambia, Labrador Canada, and Samoa.

The majority of materials in this collection are manuscripts, field notes, research materials, correspondence, articles and papers. This collection includes materials directly related to Eleanor Leacock's career as an anthropologist, such as research notes, field materials, publications, drafts, teaching materials, and correspondence, as well as resources related to the anthropology field. Since Leacock was an anthropologist as well as a professor, many in the field would send Leacock papers and materials for her to review or annotate. These are included in the Professional Materials series. This series in particular will house a large portion of the collection since it includes Leacock's work on her own publications and textbooks as well as those she reviewed for others. The Subject/Research Files series is also very large because it includes notes and research that Leacock conducted throughout her career. There is very little arrangement or description in these folders beyond what was listed on original folder headings.

The most significant portions of this collection pertain to her field work for her various studies. Her most prominant study being the work she did with the Innu in Labrador. Because Leacock passed while in the field in Samoa, the materials in the Samoa series may be unfinished, as are the materials related to her "Levels of Integraion" book, which she had been working on when she passed.

Keeping with the original order of the collection, some topics will be interspersed throughout the collection. For example, some correspondence relating to articles or publications will be found in the Publications series rather than Correspondence, and field materials may be interfiled with other studies (a few Innu materials are found in the Samoa Study series).

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Professional Materials

The Professional Materials series is divided into six sub-series: Publications/Writings, Teaching Materials, Correspondence, Conferences, Organizations, and Subject/Research Files.

The Publications/Writings sub-series includes both writing materials written by Eleanor Leacock as well as writings sent to Eleanor for review or annotation. To keep original order, any correspondence, notes, or drafts for the works are kept together. Materials are arranged topically for Leacock's publications, and alphabetically by author's name for publications not written by Leacock. Some of the works in this series are based on, or grew out of work Leacock did for her studies, and comparison to those series is suggested. Additionally, papers written for conferences can be found in the Conferences sub-series. There may also be files with materials from projects that were left unfinished by Leacock, such as the Harris materials.

The Teaching Materials sub-series includes the resources from Eleanor Leacock's teaching career, mostly from her time at the City College of New York (CUNY). Materials include lecture notes, department memos and reports, correspondence, and Leacock's CV. Items are arranged topically.

The Correspondence sub-series includes general and professional correspondence and are arranged alphabetically by sender last name. A majority of this correspondence is from professional connections, and some may also include personal. Correspondence connected with specific materials or family members has not been moved from other series in order to preserve the context of that correspondence. Therefore, the researcher is recommended to search the collection for other areas where correspondence may appear.

The Conferences sub-series includes symposium and conference notes, papers and research materials for conferences either Leacock attended or presented at. Materials are arranged alphabetically by conference name. This sub-series is closed linked to the Organizations and Publications sub-series and should be reviewed together.

The Organizations sub-series includes newsletters, memos, correspondence, meeting minutes, and articles from topical organizations. This sub-series is closely related to both the Conferences and Publications sub-series and there may be some overlap between them. Notable organizations include the Council for Marxist Anthropology, the American Anthropological Association, Anthropologists for Radical and Political Action (ARPA), Fight Back, and the International Movement of Radical Anthropologists (IMRA). Materials are arranged alphabetically by organization name.

The Subject/Research Files sub-series includes research materials, notes, topical files, correspondence, papers and articles on various subjects or areas of research. These files were the least organized of the collection when the materials were donated and did not include much description of their purpose. It is believed that a large portion relates to projects Leacock was either working on or intended to work on and so may be incomplete in their information. Materials are arranged alphabetically by topic.

0.25 Linear Feet — 21 folders in 1 manuscript box

This collection consists of letters, prints, and brochures that children's authors and their publishers sent to Chamberlain, a school librarian.

This collection consists of letters, prints, and brochures that children's authors and their publishers sent to Chamberlain, a school librarian. The letters date from late 1972 to fall of 1973. The collection consists primarily of type- and hand-written letters on various stationary. Some authors wrote on or signed brochures or book pages. A few included printed illustrations.

Authors discuss subjects such as their upcoming work, their inspirations, the importance of reading and fun in childhood, and censorship in children's literature.

Notable items include an authentic signature from Charles Schulz, an illustration from Patricia Coombs' Dorrie and the Goblin, and a series of exchanges between Chamberlain, Roald Dahl, and a magazine editor concerning a critical review of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory>.

1 Linear Foot — 2 manuscript boxes

The Ethel Smyth Papers contain correspondence with members of the musical community and members of the women's suffrage movement, drafts of autobiographical work, performance programs and pamphlets, and extensive diaries by Smyth commenting on personal matters, national and regional politics, composition and performance, and the lives of her friends. Also contains two sketches of Smyth by an unknown artist and two books of research notes by Christopher Marie St. John for the definitive biography of Smyth.

The Ethel Smyth Papers are comprised of five series. The series, Manuscripts, Print, Research Notes, Artwork, and Diaries, are arranged in two boxes. The bulk of the Manuscripts series consists of outgoing correspondence dated from 1910 to 1937, primarily addressed to recipients who were involved in the music community of the time. Most of the outgoing correspondence is addressed to Professor Donald Tovey, a Scottish composer and conductor and one of Smyth's mentors. This correspondence consists of 16 letters spanning more than 14 years and addresses various musical topics. Also represented in the outgoing correspondence are letters to composer and conductor Gordon Bryan; to Philip Heseltine (a.k.a. Peter Warlock) a composer and founder of the music serial The Sackbut regarding an article she wrote for the publication; and letters to Lady Constance Lytton, who was a friend of Smyth's in the Women's Suffrage Movement. Correspondence also includes a letter to Scottish conductor and student of Donald Tovey, Dr. Mary Grierson, remarking on the glorious first performance of Smyth's work, The Prison in February of 1931. Other correspondence consists of a letter from Lindsay Venn to Ethel Davidson regarding the disposition of Smyth's papers after her death. Also included in the Manuscripts series is the typescript of Lyrics to Smyth's composition, The Prison, based on the writing of Henry Brewster, who was strongly connected to Smyth. Finally, there is a fragment of several bars of music from the Concerto for Violin, Horn and Orchestra penned and autographed by Smyth. A fragment of a composition by Smyth's contemporary, Frederic H. Cowen is on the verso of this item. The Writings sub-series is made up of drafts of two typescripts. The first contains the first three chapters of A Fresh Start, Smyth's last autobiographical work, which was probably begun in 1941 but was never published. The second contains three drafts of An Eightieth Birthday, a speech given on BBC radio in 1938. These are heavily corrected in Smyth's hand. Finally, there is a single holograph sheet entitled Notes on "Mass in D" which seems to be jottings for program notes. The Print series consists of a program from the 1921 Queen's Hall Symphony performance of Smyth's "Love Duet" from her opera, The Wreckers. It also includes a pamphlet containing the lyrics of March of the Women, a piece Smyth wrote in support of the Women's Suffrage Movement. There are three newspaper clippings which discuss Smyth as a conductor, especially at the Bournemouth Music Festival, held in April of 1924. The Research Notes series contain two books of notes taken by Christopher Marie St. John for the definitive biography of Smyth. Both contain research notes and possibly notes from interviews with Smyth and members of her circle. The second of the notebooks is entitled "Wood on her Conducting / Beecham on Criticism" and contain commentary from two of Smyth's close acquaintances, Henry Wood and Thomas Beecham. The Artwork series consists of two pencil sketches of stage sets for Smyth's opera, "The Prison." The artist of these sketches is unidentified. Perhaps the most significant portion of this collection is the Diaries. These six volumes are in fragile condition and begin in 1917, continuing almost uninterrupted through 1942. The diaries are heavily annotated by Smyth herself, and she obviously used them in writing her autobiographical works. The dated entries present an excellent description of Smyth's life and include commentary on composition and performance of her music; her literary works; her health (in particular, her failing hearing) and travels; her beloved old English sheep dogs; World Wars I and II; the political climate of Ireland in the early 20th century; British royalty; and the lives of her many friends, including Empress Eugénie, Edith Somerville, Lady Ponsonby, Maurice Baring, Betty Balfour and Virgina Woolf. Throughout the diaries, Smyth has pasted in newspaper clippings, photography, pamphlets and other memorabilia. It is possible that Volume VI, which consists of family photographs, poetry by Ethel and her sister Mary, and other notes, is written in a hand which is not Smyth's.

2.01 Linear Feet

The Mirisola Mirisola Papers collection consists of 5 boxes and comprises materials produced during the first 15 years of his career (1989 – 2004). An inventory of the collection was made available by the author.

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First Drafts

Contents note from the author:

Tentativas, Rascunhos e Esboços de Contos, Crônicas e Roteiros escritos entre 1991 e 1995 enquanto o autor residia na cidade do Balneário de Camboriú ( SC ) e na cidade de Santos (SP ). -Crônica: Panificadora e Confeitaria Pirâmide Luminosa – Esta crônica foi o ponto de partida para o que se torna a carreira do escritor. Crônica inscrita em um concurso da Biblioteca Mário de Andrade em 1989.

-Textos produzidos entre 1991 e 1995 organizados como um pequeno livro de contos. Nestes originais podemos ver alguns parágrafos escritos e reescritos tentando dar forma e voz ao pensamento do autor

-Contos Produzidos no ano de 1995 que seriam publicados sob pseudônimo de " Marques de Dunas" com o Título de " Mamãe e o Presidente: Nós Dois de Mãos Dadas"

-Originais de vários contos produzidos no período de 1991 a 1995 com as observações correções e alterações feitas à mão sob o texto datilografado. Vários originais possuem diversas versões.

-Manuscritos, textos datilografados e suas versões com alterações do conto: Henry e Papai: sobre o que falavam em 1972?" .

-Dois parágrafos selecionados e suas variações, correções e adições que ilustram o desenvolvimento de uma ideia até que possa ser utilizada em um texto original.

Parágrafo que se inicia com " tenho lubrificantes"

Parágrafo que se inicia com " tome cuidado consigo"

-Originais e versões dos contos " A Balsa" e " Motim Seco" e sua versão original em espanhol traduzido por Angela Ambrosini.

.5 Linear Feet — 1 manuscript box

This collection consists of manuscripts of articles submitted to Fraye Arbeter Shtime, a Jewish Anarchist journal, during the 1920s and 30s.

The Fraye Arbeter Shtime papers consist of manuscripts submitted for publication during the editorships of Joseph Cohen (1923-32) and Mark Mrachnyi (1934-40).