Showing Collections: 1 - 10 of 10
Barnard Center for Research on Women (BCRW) records
Barnard Center for Research on Women Historical Periodicals Collection
This collection contains 184 different periodicals on topics such as women, gender, sexuality, feminism, psychology, and law.
Calendula: A Barnard Feminist Publication
This collection consists of Calendula: A Barnard Feminist Publication, which was a Barnard College student publication. It featured opinion pieces, a directory of feminist campus groups, events listings, articles, reviews, and poetry.
Class of 1971 Oral History Collection
The Class of 1971 Oral History Collection currently contains 39 oral histories from members of Barnard College's class of 1971.
COE/CORRE/CORRIE - Records of the Committee on Race, Religion, Identity, and Ethnicity
This collection consists of materials from the Barnard College Committee on Race, Religion, Identity, and Ethnicity (COE/CORRE/CORRIE).
Common Ground
This collection consists of Common Ground, a student publication described as being an alternative newspaper, created in the hopes of building a coalition among progressive Columbia and Barnard student groups.
Ntozake Shange Papers
Ntozake Shange (1948-2018, BC ‘70) was an American playwright and poet. The Ntozake Shange Papers include manuscripts and drafts of works; correspondence; diaries and agendas; clippings, programs, and ephemera; teaching documents; personal and professional photographs; awards, memorabilia, and personal effects; and texts, music, and other works by others collected by Shange.
Overbury Collection
The collection consists of letters, manuscripts, and books of American women authors collected by Bertha Van Riper Overbury, Barnard Class of 1896. It includes correspondence with the dealers she used to collect the material, clippings related to the material, and catalog cards for the letters, manuscripts, and books in the collection.
Sue Larson Papers
Sue Larson joined the Philosophy Department at Barnard in 1965, where she taught Philosophy through the 1990s. The collection includes her philosophical writing, course curricula, and material documenting the activities of the Department of Philosophy. Larson's material may be useful to students studying Wittgenstein, animal cognition, music and emotion, 1968 counterculture, feminism, gender in education, theory of knowledge, and anyone researching the case of Linda LeClair.