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Archive: 2018 (158 Posts)

Image of an ornate clock showing 2:05 with sculpted male figures sitting on each side of the clock face

Inquiring Minds: Finding “Something Wonderful” in the Rodgers and Hammerstein Papers

Posted by: Wendi Maloney

The following is a guest post by Todd S. Purdum, a contributing editor at Vanity Fair, a senior writer at Politico and author of “Something Wonderful: Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Broadway Revolution,” published this month by Henry Holt. For more about Broadway, keep an eye out for “Brilliant Broadway,” the May–June issue of LCM, the Library …

Image of an ornate clock showing 2:05 with sculpted male figures sitting on each side of the clock face

New Poetry Podcast Series Launches

Posted by: Wendi Maloney

This is a guest post by Anne Holmes of the Poetry and Literature Center. As April winds down, our celebration of National Poetry Month at the Library of Congress is still going strong: Today we launch “From the Catbird Seat,” a new poetry podcast series from the Poetry and Literature Center. Each Thursday for the …

Image of an ornate clock showing 2:05 with sculpted male figures sitting on each side of the clock face

Preservation Week 2018: Celebrating Veterans and Their Families

Posted by: Wendi Maloney

This is a guest post by Jacob Nadal, Director for Preservation at the Library of Congress. Every spring, libraries all across the U.S. celebrate Preservation Week. This annual event highlights what we can do, individually and together, to care for our personal collections and to support preservation efforts in libraries, archives, museums, historical societies and …

Image of an ornate clock showing 2:05 with sculpted male figures sitting on each side of the clock face

New Online: Benjamin Franklin Papers

Posted by: Wendi Maloney

This is a guest post by Julie Miller, a historian in the Manuscript Division. The papers of Benjamin Franklin at the Library of Congress have had almost as adventurous a life as Franklin had himself. They have been abandoned and recovered, cut up by a dressmaker to make patterns and used as collateral for debt. …

Image of an ornate clock showing 2:05 with sculpted male figures sitting on each side of the clock face

New Online: Unique Collection of Censored Japanese Books

Posted by: Benny Seda-Galarza

The Library’s Asian Division has digitized an archive comprising more than 1,000 marked-up copies of monographs and galley proofs censored by the Japanese government in the 1920s and 1930s. The Japanese Censorship Collection reveals traces of an otherwise-hidden censorship process through marginal notes, stamps, penciled lines and commentary inscribed by the censors’ own hands. Each …

Image of an ornate clock showing 2:05 with sculpted male figures sitting on each side of the clock face

New Recordings Online for National Poetry Month

Posted by: Wendi Maloney

This post by Anne Holmes of the Library’s Poetry and Literature Center was first published on “From the Catbird Seat,” the center’s blog. National Poetry Month is here, and we’re over the moon to announce the release of 50 additional recordings from the Archive of Recorded Poetry and Literature, now available to stream online. The …

Image of an ornate clock showing 2:05 with sculpted male figures sitting on each side of the clock face

Inquiring Minds: Uncovering the Many Meanings of Slave Narratives

Posted by: Wendi Maloney

Carley Reinhard first encountered stories of slave capture in early 2017 in Professor Stephanie Shaw’s African-American history course at Ohio State University. Reinhard became fascinated by one narrative that tells of red cloth being used to entice Africans onto ships bound for North America. During Shaw’s course, Reinhard asked Shaw to serve as her adviser …