987 research outputs found
(Shirl in action) : Poster: Shirl and Beryl (Dee Taylor-Graham and Evie Spanos)
Dimensions: 2.5 x 0.9 m. Medium: digital print. Copyright Dee Taylor-Graham. Photographer: Evie Spanos.For more information about this item, browse to http://hdl.handle.net/102.100.100/488
Dee Brown papers [DIGITAL CONTENT]
This collection contains the literary and personal records of author and librarian Dorris Alexander (Dee) Brown, and covers the time period 1931-2002
(Shirl in action) : Exhibition view
Copyright Dee Taylor-Graham. Photographer: Evie Spanos.For more information about this item, browse to http://hdl.handle.net/102.100.100/488
(Shirl in action) : Detail view of cup and saucers
Dimensions: 10 x 10 cm. Medium: porcelain with engobe, sgraffito and decal. Technique: hand built. Copyright Dee Taylor-Graham. Photographer: Greg Piper.For more information about this item, browse to http://hdl.handle.net/102.100.100/488
Ruby Dee - Actress, Author, and Activist
In celebration of Wright State University\u27s Martin Luther King commemoration and the 35th anniversary of the Bolinga Black Cultural Resources Center
Ruby Dee, noted actress, author, and activist for social justice, has appeared in more than 40 films and countless Broadway plays during a 50-year stage and screen career. Dee was acclaimed for her acting in her late husband Ossie Davis\u27s satirical exploration of segregation, Purlie Victorious; in A Raisin in the Sun; her Ace Award-winning performance in Eugene O\u27Neill\u27s Long Day\u27s Journey into Night; and in Spike Lee\u27s Do the Right Thing. In 1965, she played Kate in The Taming of the Shrew and Cordelia in King Lear in the American Shakespeare Festival. She won an Emmy in 1991 for NBC\u27s Decoration Day. She and Davis received a Life Achievement Award, the highest honor bestowed by the Screen Actors Guild. Tireless human rights activists, Dee and Davis were close friends of Malcolm X (whom Davis eulogized as our own black shining prince ), and their production company produced the PBS special Martin Luther King: The Dream and the Drum. While remaining active in social causes, Dee has still found time to write plays, musicals, poetry books, and her one-woman show, My One Good Nerve.https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/archives_presidential_lecture_series/1067/thumbnail.jp
\u3cem\u3eLoving to Survive: Sexual Terror and Women\u27s Lives.\u3c/em\u3e Dee L. Graham with Edna I. Rawlings and Roberta K. Rigsby.
Dee L. Graham with Edna I. Rawlings and Roberta K. Rigsby, Loving to Survive: Sexual Terror and Women\u27s Lives. New York: New York University Press, 1994. $24.95 hardcover
Recommended from our members
Letter to Dee from Margaret Mitchell, author of Gone With the Wind.
Letter to Dee from Margaret Mitchell, author of Gone With the Wind
Review of Dee Brown
Lyman B. Hagen, of Arkansas State University, has written a helpful aid for students of the writings of Dee Brown. Brown is best known as the author of non-fiction like Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, but Hagen reminds us that Brown has also written novels, historical fiction, and children\u27s books. Hagen combines quotations from various reviews of Brown\u27s work with personal comments by Dee Brown himself to introduce the novice reader to the varied life and writings of this prolific and unconventional author. This book should prove very useful for all students of the American West
A plate a day keeps the psychiatrist at bay [Image no. 16795]
Copyright Dee Taylor-Graham.For more information about this item, browse to http://hdl.handle.net/102.100.100/482
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