Search results: 6 Finding Aids
Guide to the Faculty Publications 1844-1994 RG 1.0
The items in this collection represent a sample of published works by New York University professors and lecturers.
Guide to the Gay and Lesbian Pulp Fiction Collection 1955-1988 MSS 116
American queer culture saw some of its earliest mass expression in the pulp fiction market starting around the end of World War II. The collection includes a substantial sampling of the gay pulp fiction genre from the 1950's to the 1980's.
Guide to the Jules Weinstein Papers 1939-1954 (Bulk 1951-1952) MC 210
The Jules Weinstein Papers include correspondence, published articles, and lecture notes by Dr. Jules Weinstein, whose academic and professional interests bridged the fields of dentistry and hypnosis.
Guide to the Mix Collection 1970-2001 (Bulk 1987-2001) MSS 143
The Mix Collection contains the paper and media files for the Mix: New York Lesbian and Gay Experimental Film and Video Festival. Started in 1987 by filmmaker Jim Hubbard and novelist Sarah Schulman, Mix is the longest-running experimental film festival and the largest queer film festival in the United States. The Festival has been instrumental in both launching the careers of filmmakers such as Todd Haynes and Sadie Benning and in providing an exhibition space for and preservation of the work of older filmmakers such as Barbara Hammer and James Broughton. Mix was also one of the first film festivals to embrace installations and online artwork to showcase the depth and breadth of queer digital media. The Festival has traditionally been held annually at the Anthology Film Archives in New York City.
Guide to the Michelangelo Signorile Papers ca. 1985-2000 Michelangelo Signorile Papers
This archive follows the development of Michelangelo Signorile’s writing career from its early stages through the publishing of his most recent book, Life Outside, and his magazine articles of the late 1990s. From his days at Outweek magazine forward, the archive documents the life cycle of each of his books and columnist jobs, from initial reporting and research to publicity and fan letters in response to the published work. As an extensive account of Signorile’s career in the late 1980s through the end of the 1990s, the archive serves as an informative chronicle of the gay movement towards further recognition and visibility in America.
The Guide to the John Canemaker Animation Collection 1903-2008 (Bulk 1970-2000) MSS 40
John Canemaker (b. 1943) is an internationally recognized independent animator, animation historian, author, teacher and lecturer. Since 1988, he has directed the animation program at the Tisch School of the Arts', Kanbar Institute of Film and Television. He has also been a Guest Fellow at Yale University. Canemaker's interest inanimation began in childhood, and it has moved him to write more than 100 articles on the subject, as well as several books, including the story of the making of Richard Williams' Raggedy Ann &Andy entitled: The Animated Raggedy Ann & Andy (1977). Canemaker's own films include:'The 40's' (1974), 'Bottom's Dream' (1983), 'The Hunger Project' (1987), animation sequences for'The World According To Garp' (1981), 'You Don't Have To Die' (1988) which received anAcademy Award, Confessions of a Stand-Up (1993), and Bridgehampton (1998). Canemaker began collecting the material that comprises this collection in theearly 1970's, and eventually obtained a wealth of material about the history, technique,and cultural significance of animated films. Items include animation resources such as: documentary material, drawings, posters, storyboards, recorded interviews and lectures, personal research materials for his articles and books, and periodicals.
