Rating |
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Title |
Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett interview; |
Access |
Not available online - held remotely at Indiana University Center for the Study of History and Memory; |
Source URL |
Original interview: http://webapp1.dlib.indiana.edu/findingaids/view?brand=general&docId=ohrc070&chunk.id=d1e2951&startDoc=1 . This item is only available in a cassette audio format or a paper transcript. It is currently not available in digital format. |
What is in this collection? |
Interviews Transcripts Sound recordings Oral histories |
Description |
This interview is included in the Indiana University Folklore Institute, 1987 Collection at the Indiana University Center for the Study of History and Memory. In this interview, Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett talks of her early education in English literature at the University of Toronto and University of California-Berkeley, and her interactions with Alan Dundes, which led her to attend the Indiana University Folklore Institute to earn her doctoral degree in folklore. She discusses the people at IU that influenced her. She discusses the strong and active student population, who led a small revolt against the poor teaching methods of the folklore faculty, and later initiated the Folklore Forum, a student run journal. She speaks of the development of the field of folklore over time and the diversification of the study of folklore today. This collection is part of the Indiana University Folklore Institute, 1987 Collection which is available at the Indiana University Center for the Study of History and Memory. It consists of: 35 pages, 1 cassette (1 7/8 ips, 42 minutes) and no index. This collection is closed until 2015 except to authorized project personnel. The IU Folklore Institute, 1987 Collection deals with the beginning, the building, and the growth of the Indiana University IU Folklore Institute into an internationally recognized program. The interviewees are mostly students and/or faculty of the folklore program from the 1940s to the 1980s. They discuss those who most influenced and impacted the institute, namely Stith Thompson and Richard M. Dorson. They share their memories and experiences of the time they spent, or continue to spend, in the IU Folklore Institute. |
Where can I find the original? |
This collection is available at the Indiana University Center for the Study of History and Memory and the call number is 87-027. Interviews are housed in Weatherly Hall North, Room 122. Copies are also housed at the Indiana University Archives in Herman B Wells Library E460. For other locations housing the interviews from this project, please contact the Center for the Study of History and Memory office. ; |
Original Date |
October 26, 1986 |
Interviewee |
Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Barbara; |
Interviewer |
Harrah-Conforth, Jeanne, 1954- |
Other Contributors |
Harrah-Johnson, Jeanne, 1954-; |
Place |
Indiana University |
This collection is part of the |
Indiana University Folklore Institute, 1987 Collection, available at the Indiana University Center for the Study of History and Memory |
Subject-LCSH |
Dégh, Linda Dorson, Richard M. (Richard Mercer), 1916-1981 Dundes, Alan Mintz, Jerome R. Thompson, Stith, 1885-1976 Turner Hotel Folklore Forum Folklorists--United States--Interviews Women folklorists--United States--Interviews |
Subject-Keyword |
Student activism Teaching methods |
Geographic Locations discussed |
University of California, Berkeley University of Toronto Indiana University Bloomington (Ind.) |
Time periods covered |
1960-1969 1970-1979 1980-1989 20th century |
Publisher |
Indiana University Center for the Study of History and Memory; |
Places Taught |
Indiana University Tisch School of the Arts |
Rights |
Copies of transcript pages are available only when such copies are permitted by the deed of gift signed by the interviewee. Scholars must honor any restrictions the interviewee placed on the use of an interview. Since some of our earlier (pre-computer) transcripts do not yet exist in final form, any editing marks in a transcript (deletions, additions, corrections) are to be quoted as marked. Tapes may not be copied for patrons unless the deed of gift permits it. Because our interviewees edit their transcripts, the transcript (if one exists) is the only version of the interview that may be quoted for publication. Interviews may not be reproduced in full for any public use, but excerpted quotes may be used as long as scholars fully cite any Indiana University Center for the Study of History and Memory data in their research, including accession number, interview date, interviewee's and interviewer's names, and page(s). Please see http://www.indiana.edu/~cshm/copycost.html for more details. |
Digital History Collection |
Collecting Memories - Oral Histories of American Folklorists |
Type |
Sound Text |
Search Date |
1986-10-26 |
Identifier |
CM-IU003 |