From the Editor: FYI

A little while ago I came across the National Women’s History Museum, which is as the title suggests a museum dedicated to the achievements of women throughout history. The world has been dominated by the male energy and therefore most historical events have been told by males relating to males… A lot of history has been lost I am because women didn’t have the power or were seen as being inconsequential and so their stories weren’t told… The time has come to document and share the words and actions of strong, intelligent and caring woman who have gone before us… Cheers to those who came up with this idea and who spend time and money on making it a reality.  For more information please Click Here to go to the website. 

 

NWHM Invites You to a Special Women’s History Book Event

at the Library of Congress, March 2, 2012

The Center for the Book at the Library of Congress, in partnership with the National Women’s History Museum and the Washington Area Group for Print Culture Studies, is hosting a special presentation of Right Here I See My Own Books: The Woman’s Building Library at the World’s Columbian Exposition (University of Massachusetts Press, January 2012).

 

The book’s co-authors, Sarah Wadsworth (associate professor of English at Marquette University) and Wayne A. Wiegand (F. William Summers Professor of Library and Information Studies Emeritus at Florida State University), will be presenting on Friday, March 2 from 3:00 – 5:00 p.m. at the Library of Congress, Thomas Jefferson Building, (10 First Street, S.E. Washington, DC), Room LJ 119.

 

The Woman’s Building at the Columbian Exposition housed the Library featuring over 8,000 books written by women. While American women wrote the majority of the books, women from other countries were also represented at this World’s Fair and their books spanned women’s writings from the Fifteenth through the Nineteenth Centuries. One of the major benefits of the authors’ research for the book has once again gathered the titles of the books that were in the Library of the Woman’s Building. Using the power of the Internet, the authors are placing the information in an online database so that it can be accessed by researchers, students and those interested in women’s history throughout the world!

 

If you are not in the DC area, six other presentations are currently scheduled around the country for March/April 2012 at prestigious universities and sponsored by a variety of organizations including AAUW, Carrie Chapman Catt Institute for Women & Politics, University Departments, Student Government organizations, libraries and a host of others. We hope you can attend one of these amazing presentations!

 

 

March – April 2012

 

March 2 – 3:00 – 5:00 p.m. Center for the Book at the Library of Congress,Washington, DC. Sponsored by National Women’s History Museum and the Washington Area Group for Print Culture Studies, Library of Congress   Thomas Jefferson Building (10 First Street S.E.) Room LJ 119.

 

March 23 – 9:00 a.m. -3:30 p.m. Scholars Commons, Strozier Library, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida. Sponsored by FSU Libraries and Friends of the FSU Libraries, the Colloquium on the Book participants (in addition to Wiegand) include Rutgers Professor Marija Dalbello, and FSU Professors Meegan Kennedy, Jennifer Koslow, Silvia Valisaa, Anne Rowe and NWHM representative and noted historian of women’s history Doris Weatherford.

 

March 28 – 7:00 p.m. South Ballroom, Memorial Union, Iowa State University,Ames, Iowa. Sponsored by Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women and Politics, Women’s and Gender Studies program, College of Liberal Arts and Science, F. Wendell Miller Lecture Fund, Department of History, and Committee on Lectures (funded by the Government of the Student Body).

 

March 29 – 6:00 p.m. Room RB 150, Northwestern University School of Law, Arthur Rubloff Building, 375 E. Chicago Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Sponsored by the Northwestern University Libraries, which houses the remainder of the Woman’s Building Library Collection, and the American Library Association, which participated in the constructions of the original library. Sarah Wadsworth is co-presenting with Wayne Wiegand.

 

April 2 – 7:00 p.m. Mead Library, Northern Michigan University, Marquette, Michigan. Sponsored by AAUW, Lydia Olson Library, Department of Sociology & Social Work, Committee on Women and the Peter White Library.

 

April 23 – Noon – Commons, 4th Floor, Helen C. White Hall, University of Wisconsin – Madison, Madison, Wisconsin. Sponsored by the Center for the History of Print and Digital Culture. Sarah Wadsworth is co-presenting.

 

April 24 – 4:00 p.m., Room 126, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, 501 East Daniel Street, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,Champaign, Illinois.

 

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