d’Archive is a weekly show curated by the Archives & Special Collections at the UConn Library to broadcast sound recordings from within collections around themes and interviews conducted amongst archivists, researchers, librarians and music aficionados. This project was established to promote unexpected collections in everyday spaces throughout the campus and surrounding community.
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This episode features a deep dive into archives and library collections that relate to the fantastical desert world of Dune created by author Frank Herbert (1920-1986) which gained traction with environmental activists of the late 1960s and 70s. This research session integrates my field recordings from the archives doing research into this selected…
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This episode features a conversation with Assistant Professor Dexter Gabriel of the UConn History Department who writes speculative fiction under the pen name P. Djèlí Clark. This is Part 2 of the research sessions episodes on Hippie Hobbits (d’Archive #50) and the influences of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle Earth on the late1960s counter-culture as disc…
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This episode of d’Archive features a conversation with Emily Larned who is a printmaker, zinester, and Associate Professor of Art in Graphic Design at UConn’s School of Fine Arts. We discuss her history as a Zine maker and creator of artists’ books, her co-founding of the Impractical Labor in Service of the Speculative Arts (ILLSA), and continued […
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This episode of d’Archive is hosted by archivist Kristin Eshelman in conversation with elementary school educator and picture book maker Corbin Lichtinger. Corbin spent time in the John P. McDonald Reading Room researching the James Marshall Papers as the 2024 James Marshall Fellow. This conversation features his perspective on process, creative pe…
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This episode features an exhibition walkthrough with alumni Gary King (’74) who was active in organizing Black students during his time at the University of Connecticut, Storrs campus. One of the high-water marks for activism by students of color at UConn was the 1974 Black Student Sit-In in Wilbur Cross Library which he operated as […]…
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This episode features an interview with alumni Rodney Bass (BA ’75/MA ’76) who was active in organizing Black students through the Organization of African American Students (OAAS) during his time at the University of Connecticut, Storrs campus. One of the high-water marks for activism by students of color at UConn was the 1974 Black Student […]…
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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Guest Curator, George Jacobi and Chris Malis join me for a conversation about the UConn Archives exhibition Day-Glo & Napalm: UConn 1967-1971. As UConn alumni, and Woodstock audience members, George and Chris discuss the exhibition, their student days at UConn 50 years ago, the music, the attitudes, and the perspectives they hold about the times [……
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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By Graham Stinnett
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