CFP: The Thoreau Institute at Walden Woods Library (no deadline; archives)
CFP: The Thoreau Institute at Walden Woods Library (Archives: no =
deadline)
The Thoreau Institute at Walden Woods is owned and operated by the =
Walden
Woods Project. It provides the most comprehensive body of =
Thoreau-related
material available in one place. Opening in 1998, the Thoreau =
Institute's
Library holds 8000 volumes, and upwards of 60,000 items that include
manuscripts, correspondence, periodicals, pamphlets, music, graphic =
arts,
maps, and personal histories. It is the mission of the Library to =
collect,
preserve and make available research materials relating to Thoreau, his
historical context, and his contemporary relevance to environmental and
human-rights issues.=20
The Thoreau Institute's increasing collections range from the =
unprecedented
Thoreau Society's collections, including the personal collection of the =
dean
of Thoreau scholars, Walter Harding, to the environmental writings of =
Paul
Brooks and the social reform papers of Scott and Helen Nearing. =20
Some of the highlights of the collections include the recently =
discovered
thirty-six-leaf manuscript draft of Thoreau's "Sir Walter Raleigh" =
essay; an
original daguerreotype of Thoreau taken in 1856 in Worcester by =
Benjamin
Maxham; several Thoreau surveys; manuscript correspondence of several =
of
Thoreau's friends and contemporaries, including Franklin Sanborn, =
Harrison
Gray Otis Blake, and Daniel Ricketson; documentation by archaeologist =
Roland
Robbins on his 1945 excavation of the Walden house site; original =
issues of
such periodicals as The Dial and =C6sthetic Papers; scarce Scott =
Nearing
books, including his forthright 1929 expos=E9 of race relations, Black
America, and his 1912 book Woman and Social Progress, written with his =
first
wife, Nellie Seeds Nearing; and rare books of environmental literature, =
such
as Buffon's Natural History (1785), Gilpin's Remarks on Forest Scenery
(1834) and Knapp's Journal of a Naturalist (1830).=20
The library comes as close as possible to fulfilling Thoreau's own =
vision:
"I have sometimes imagined a library, i.e. a collection of the works of =
true
poets philosophers naturalists &c deposited not in a . . . marble =
edifice in
a crowded & dusty city . . . but rather far away in the depths of a
primitive forest." A library is not only a place for books and reading. =
It
is collective memory; it is memory collected. The materials that =
comprise
the collections document and preserve what has come before us. By =
viewing
the past we can see the present and envision the future.
We invited you - scholars, students, and authors - to place a copy of =
your
work relating to any aspect of Thoreau's life and legacy in the =
archives of
the Thoreau Institute at Walden Woods. Your work will be given a =
permanent
home in the world's most comprehensive collection of Thoreau-related
material. For more information on the Thoreau Institute, go to:
www.walden.org/institute, or contact the Curator at: =
curator_at_walden.org. You
may send your work to: Jeffrey S. Cramer, Curator of Collections, The
Thoreau Institute at Walden Woods, 44 Baker Farm, Lincoln, MA =
01773-3004.
All material sent becomes the property of the Walden Woods Project for
inclusion in its library at the Thoreau Institute. No material will be
returned.=20
=20
=20
Jeffrey S. Cramer, Curator of Collections=20
The Thoreau Institute at Walden Woods=20
44 Baker Farm, Lincoln, MA 01773-3004=20
The Thoreau Institute at Walden Woods is owned and managed by the =
Walden
Woods Project
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Received on Thu Feb 02 2006 - 15:18:51 EST