5,285 research outputs found

    H. Harry Riley, Jr. signing his book

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    Elk Compliment; To A Great Author and Personality; H. Harry Rileyhttps://dh.howard.edu/ebhend_bsp/1091/thumbnail.jp

    MOORLAND, JESSE EDWARD

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    Author: Moorland, Jesse Edward, 1863-1940 (See Finding Aid) Title: Papers, 1790-1940 Description: 40 linear ft. Notes: Afro-American executive of the YMCA, trustee of Howard University, minister, and collector of books relating to Afro-Americans. Family and personal papers; general correspondence; speeches; photographs; and correspondence, clippings, printed materials, reports, and minutes relating to various organizations with which Moorland was affiliated, particularly the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, Howard University, the Moorland Foundation, the Nazarene Congregation Church in Brooklyn, NY, the United War Work Campaign, the YMCA, the YMCA Colored Men\u27s Department, the YMCA International Committee, and the YMCA National Council. Correspondents include Albert Cassell, W. E. B. Du Bois, James Stanley Durkee, William Leo Hansberry, William Alphaeus Hunton, James Weldon Johnson, Mordecai W. Johnson, Alain Locke, Kelly Miller, George Foster Peabody, Jean Toomer, Booker T. Washington, Charles H. Wesley, Carter Godwin Woodson, and Max Yergan. Gift of Jesse Edward Moorland, 1941. Subjects: Afro-American academic libraries -- Washington (DC) Afro-American executives -- Washington (DC). lcsh Afro-Americans -- Societies, etc. Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, Inc. Cassell, Albert Irvin, 1895-1969, correspondent. Du Bois, W. E. B. (William Edward Burghardt), 1868-1963, as correspondent. Durkee, J. Stanley (James Stanley), 1866-1951, as correspondent. Hansberry, William Leo, correspondent. Howard University. Moorland Foundation. Hunton, Alphaeus, 1903-1970, as correspondent. Johnson, James Weldon, 1871-1938, as correspondent. Johnson, Mordecai W. (Mordecai Wyatt), 1890-1976, as correspondent. Locke, Alain LeRoy, 1886-1954, as correspondent. Miller, Kelly, 1863-1939, as correspondent. National Council of the Young Men\u27s Christian Associations of the United States of America. Nazarene Congregation Church (Brooklyn, New York, NY) Peabody, George Foster, 1852-1938, as correspondent. Toomer, Jean, 1894-1967, as correspondent. United War Work Campaign. Washington, Booker T., 1856-1915, as correspondent. Wesley, Charles H. (Charles Harris), 1891-1987, as correspondent. Woodson, Carter Godwin, 1875-1950, as correspondent. World War, 1914-1918 -- War work -- Young Men\u27s Christian associations. Young Men\u27s Christian associations -- United States. Yergan, Max, 1894-1975, as correspondent. YMCA of the USA. YMCA of the USA. Colored Men\u27s Dept. YMCA of the USA. International Committee. Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. Location: Howard University, Moorland-Spingarn Research Center (Washington, DC) NIDS Fiche #: 4.72.80 NUCMC #: DCLV96-A74

    TERRELL, Mary Church

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    Title: Papers, 1888-1976 Description: 17 linear ft. Notes: Lecturer, author, civil rights activist. Correspondence, clippings, newspaper articles, pamphlets, broadsides, and other printed matter, and other papers chiefly relating to the National Association of Colored Women, of which Mrs. Terrell was first national president. Documents Terrell\u27s work on behalf of women\u27s rights, and against racial discrimination. Consists of her writings about peace, women\u27s rights, black history. Also includes drafts of her autobiography, A Colored Woman in a White World, and Phyllis Wheatley: A Pageant. Contains numerous material relating to the Coordinating Committee for the Enforcement of the D.C. Anti-Discrimination Contains family papers of R. R. Church, Mrs. Terrell\u27s husband, District of Columbia Municipal Court Judge Robert H. Terrell, and Phyllis Terrell. Also includes seven diaries, copies of minutes (1935-36) of the Race Relations Federation of Churches, and letters addressed to Olivia Davidson Washington (Mrs. Booker T. Washington) concerning the International Council of the Women of the Darker Races. Gift, 1958. Location: Howard University, Moorland-Spingarn Research Center (Washington, DC) NIDS Fiche #: 4.72.112; 4.72.148 NUCMC #: MS 62-387

    SPINGARN, Joel

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    Title: Papers Description: 4 linear ft. Notes: Scholar, author, publisher, literary critic, philanthropist, and president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Correspondence; bills, lists, reports, pictures and other material on the Amenia Conference, the military training camp for black officers in Des Moines, Iowa; NAACP papers; constitution, declaration, and other papers of the Niagara Movement; family correspondence; newspaper clippings; and an autograph album. The material is related to the library\u27s Arthur Spingarn collection. Card index in the library. Gift, 1957. Subjects: Afro-Americans (for all permanent residents of the United States of black African ancestry); Amenia Conferences Amenia Conferences Armed Forces; Afro-Americans Autograph collections; Albums and books Blacks; Organizations and societies Camps (military); Iowa Du Bois, William Edward Burghardt Fort Des Moines, Iowa Frazier, E. Franklin Gompers, Samuel L. Grimké, Archibald H. Hughes, Langston Johnson, James Weldon Labor leaders; Gompers, Samuel L. Mays, Benjamin McKay, Claude Miller, Kelly Moton, Robert Russa National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; history National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; Spingarn, Joel E., chairman of the board Niagara Movement Peterkin, Julia (Wood) Scott, Emmett Spingarn family Terrell, Mary Church Location: Howard University, Moorland-Spingarn Research Center (Washington, DC) NIDS Fiche #: 4.72.105 NUCMC #: MS 62-428

    The poems of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey.

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    "London: printed by C. Whittingham, Tooks Court" -- Colophon."Memoir of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey," p. [xi]-lxxix.Portrait of author, frontispiece, by H. Robinson.Title vignette.Mode of access: Internet.SPEC: In original purple cloth; title label on spine. Covers worn. Signature on front fly-leaf: "J. McClennen, 1941

    GRIMKE, Archibald

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    The Archibald H. Grimke Papers contain materials that reflect his career as a lawyer, editor, author, lecturer, politician and diplomat. These papers include early correspondence with members of the Grimke-Weld and Grimke-Stanley families, other personal, general and organizational correspondence, legal files, Santo Domingo records (which contain official documents regarding his United States Consulship from 1894 to 1898), financial records, manuscripts, articles, addresses, newspaper clippings, photographs memorabilia, artifacts, and bound publications

    The modernist angel: Art at the Limits of the Human in D. H. Lawrence, H. D. and Mina Loy

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    PhDThe subject of this thesis is a figure that might provisionally be called the *modemist angel'. Focusing on modernist literature, and more particularly on the work of D. H. Lawrence, H. D. and Mina Loy, it aims to isolate from the many angels found in all periods and all types of art a historically specific and intellectually coherent paradigm: an angel of and for its modernist times. A figure of precisely this type could be said to exist in the form of Walter Benjamin's 'angel of history'. Critics who address the question of the modern angel in texts by Franz Kafka and Rainer Maria Rilke often do so in conjunction with the problem posed by the angel of history. Beginning with a chapter on Benjamin, this thesis nevertheless follows a different trajectory. Over five chapters, it explores a modernist landscape formed not only by Lawrence, H. D. and Loy, but also by European and American writers such as A. R. Orage, Allen Upward, Ezra Pound, Wallace Stevens, Havelock Ellis, Edward Carpenter, Sigmund Freud and Friedrich Nietzsche. Although the angel that emerges from this investigation might, in some respects, be said to anticipate Benjamin's later version, this figure is also very different, standing for a project that is distinctively, and recognisably, modernist in nature. He/she (the sex of the modernist angel is often open to question) represents an attempt to reconcile the divine responsibilities of the artist with the material and gendered conditions of being, specifically of being human, in the modem world. This thesis looks again at the clash of intellectual paradigms in the early-twentieth century - notably, the confrontation of the Romantic view of art as a superhuman or sacred undertaking with the psychoanalytical or evolutionary idea that all human endeavour is underpinned by sub-human motives - and suggests the angel as a new and instructive figure through which to think the perilous limits between the human and the divine in modernist literature
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