新利18彩票靠谱吗|18luck新利 提现

编辑

Skip to Search Skip to Navigation Skip to Content Skip to Footer Server Maintenance MOBIUS borrowing and lending services are temporarily suspended. Learn more. WashU Libraries Primary Menu Search this site Submit Library Hours My Account Search Tools Search This Site About Locations Services Research Support Special Collections Exhibitions News Events back to previous menu Competitions & Awards Neureuther Competition Newman Exploration Travel Fund Sato Research Award back to previous menu Employment Staff Employment Student Employment back to previous menu Advisory Groups Faculty Libraries Council National Council Student Advisory Group back to previous menu Leadership Leadership Advisory Groups back to previous menu Newsletters & Reports Newsletters & Reports Impact Report back to previous menu Policies Borrowing & Returns Collection Development Policy Confidentiality Policy Data Sharing & Curation Policy Fines & Fees Gifts-in-Kind Policy Interlibrary Loan Policies Olin Library Guidelines and Policies Open Scholarship Policies Posting and Digital Signage Policy Privacy Statement Research Studio Policy Special Collections Collection Development Policy Special Collections Research Guidelines Streaming Reserves Policy Technology Policies back to previous menu Support the Libraries Support the Libraries Donating to Special Collections Legacy of Books Wishlist back to previous menu About About the Libraries Ask Us Collaborate with the Libraries Competitions & Awards Employment Grants Projects Inclusion, Diversity, Equity & Access Leadership Library Hours Maps & Directions Newsletters & Reports Organization Chart Policies Reading Recommendations Staff Directory Strategic Priorities Support the Libraries back to previous menu John M. Olin Library John M. Olin Library Collection Locations Newman Exploration Center Olin Library Guidelines and Policies Olin Library Amenities and Technology Whispers Café back to previous menu Al and Ruth Kopolow (Business) Library Al and Ruth Kopolow (Business) Library Faculty Services and Resources back to previous menu East Asian Library East Asian Library East Asian Collections back to previous menu Locations Locations Overview John M. Olin Library Al and Ruth Kopolow (Business) Library Bernard Becker Medical Library Brown School Library East Asian Library Gaylord Music Library Kenneth and Nancy Kranzberg Art & Architecture Library Law Library West Campus Library back to previous menu Services Services Borrowing & Returns Course Reserves Fines & Fees Interlibrary Loan Library Instruction My Library Accounts Printing Proxy Borrowing Recommend a Purchase Study Rooms Technology Lending back to previous menu Government Publications Collections Government Publications Collections Atomic Energy Technical Reports Civil Rights Suite Congressional Papers & Publications Congressional Serial Set back to previous menu Tools and Guides Tools and Guides A-Z Database Guide ArchivesSpace Citation Resources Classic Catalog Digital Search Tools eJournals and eBooks Google Scholar Government Publications Collections Interlibrary Loan MOBIUS New Acquisitions Open Scholarship Quick Search Reference Sources Research Guides WorldCat back to previous menu Data Services Data Services Core Data Services Details Data Communities Data Instruction Data Services Spaces and Tools Data Services Tiers of Service back to previous menu Scholarly Communication & Digital Publishing Services Copyright Support Digital Publishing Support Institutional Repository Support Persistent Identifiers Publishing Support back to previous menu Subject Librarians Subject Librarians Subject Librarians, A-Z Subject Librarians, by Subject back to previous menu Research Support Research Support Overview Tools and Guides Data Services Digital Projects Library Instruction Preservation Remote Resources Scholarly Communication & Digital Publishing Services Special Collections Research & Access Subject Librarians back to previous menu Special Collections Special Collections Overview Special Collections Research & Access Digital Collections Dowd Illustration Research Archive East Asian Library Special Collections Film & Media Archive Kranzberg Art & Architecture Library Special Collections Local History Manuscript Collections Modern Literature Collection Music Special Collections Rare Book Collections University Archives back to previous menu Exhibitions Exhibitions Overview Current Exhibitions Digital Exhibitions Past Exhibitions Permanent Exhibitions Upcoming Exhibitions back to previous menu Search this site Submit back to previous menu Library Hours View hours for: Data Services AVAJohn M. Olin LibraryAl and Ruth Kopolow (Business) LibraryEast Asian LibraryGaylord Music LibraryKenneth and Nancy Kranzberg Art & Architecture Library Sun June 16 9:00am - 5:00pm Mon June 17 8:30am - 8:00pm Tue June 18 8:30am - 8:00pm Wed June 19 8:30am - 8:00pm Thu June 20 8:30am - 8:00pm Fri June 21 8:30am - 5:00pm Sat June 22 9:00am - 5:00pm Sun June 23 9:00am - 5:00pm Mon June 24 8:30am - 8:00pm Tue June 25 8:30am - 8:00pm Wed June 26 8:30am - 8:00pm Thu June 27 8:30am - 8:00pm Fri June 28 8:30am - 5:00pm Sat June 29 9:00am - 5:00pm Sun June 30 9:00am - 5:00pm Tools Access My Accounts Ask Us FAQs Hours Off-Campus Access Remote Resources Study Rooms Resource Search Library Hours My Account Henry Hampton Collection Henry Hampton (1940-1998) was a St. Louis native and a 1961 graduate of Washington University. In 1968, he established his Boston-based company Blackside, Inc., which quickly became the largest African-American-owned film production company of its time. Hampton’s work in documentary film chronicled the 20th century’s great political and social movements focusing on the lives of the poor and disenfranchised. Hampton originally aspired to be a fiction writer but the circumstances of his life and upbringing in the segregated city of St. Louis during the ‘50s and ‘60s led him to his great subject: the civil rights movement. Hampton’s involvement in the 1965 protests in Selma, Alabama created the idea for a film in his mind, but it would take twenty years to bring that story to the twenty million viewers who saw Eyes on the Prize. The series chronicled the epic struggle of unknown heroes, as well as the leaders of the movement. Hampton interviewed key people who had previously been unknown to historians, and he used innovative documentary film techniques to present the story. Decades after its release, Eyes on the Prize is still considered the definitive work on the civil rights movement. The Boston Globe praised the series as “one of the most distinguished documentary series in the history of broadcasting.” Henry Hampton and G. Robert Hohler marching in Selma, Alabama, on the day of James Reeb’s memorial service. Washington University Libraries, Henry Hampton Collection. Hampton’s other documentaries include The Great Depression (1993), Malcolm X: Make It Plain (1994), America’s War on Poverty (1995), Breakthrough: The Changing Face of Science in America (1997), I’ll Make Me a World: A Century of African-American Arts (1998); Hopes on the Horizon (1999) and This Far by Faith (2003). Hampton and his production company, Blackside, garnered many awards over the years including a Peabody Award in Excellence in broadcast journalism, and episodes of Eyes on the Prize were nominated for an Academy Award and received two Emmy Awards. Beyond the civil rights movement, Hampton’s documentaries cover social justice issues, Africa, poverty, religion, and African-Americans in the arts and science. The 35,000-plus items in the Henry Hampton Collection include unique filmed interviews with key figures in the civil rights movement. As is true for most film productions, the outtakes often comprise the bulk of the material, and these interviews represent a vast resource. The digital projects, Eyes on the Prize: The Complete Interviews and The Great Depression Interviews, make the content of these interviews available to scholars, researchers, and historians. Other material includes rare stock footage, photographs, scripts, storyboards, producers’ notes, correspondence, film production elements, study guides, books, and other materials. There are many treasures in the Hampton Collection and the materials are a rich resource for anyone interested in the process of filmmaking and the wide subject matter Hampton delved into in this work. Washington University Libraries preserves and promotes the Henry Hampton Collection for educational and scholarly use by students, faculty, and filmmakers as well as by institutions and individuals in the surrounding community and beyond. Digitized Material from the Henry Hampton Collection Eyes on the Prize Researchers, scholars, and the general public can view the complete interviews with the accompanying transcripts from the groundbreaking series Eyes on the Prize, produced by filmmaker Henry Hampton. Eyes on the Prize is a 14-part series that was originally released in two parts: Eyes I in 1987 and Eyes II in 1990. This series debuted on PBS stations and is considered to be the definitive documentary on the Civil Rights Movement. The digitization and reassembly of all of the interviews from Eyes on the Prize were made possible by grants from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC) and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). Explore the preserved and digitized interviews from Eyes on the Prize. The Great Depression Researchers, scholars, and the general public can view the complete interviews with the accompanying transcripts from the groundbreaking series The Great Depression produced by filmmaker Henry Hampton. From the stock market crash of 1929 to the beginnings of World War II, The Great Depression tells the dramatic and diverse stories of struggle and survival during the worst economic crisis in U.S. history. Originally debuting on PBS stations in 1993, the 7-part series was met with critical acclaim, winning an Emmy for writing and a duPont-Columbia Award. Explore the digitized interviews from The Great Depression. Celebrating Henry Hampton and His Legacy Hampton was granted an Honorary Degree from his alma mater and delivered the commencement speech at Washington University on May 17, 1989 (Washington University Archives) “We did not choose particularly popular subjects. But we have to do it because without understanding the nature of history we are weakened in our approach in dealing with any current reality.” Henry E. Hampton Jr. Henry Hampton and His Legacy – Speech by Bob Hohler at the University Libraries’ National Council Meeting at Washington University in St. Louis on September 20, 2002 Keynote Address by Julian Bond – at the opening of the Film & Media Archive, September 20, 2002 On the very first page of his book Voices of Freedom, Hampton addresses the reader “We are privileged in this life if we are given the opportunity to do important work… work that touches our fellow human beings in a positive and uplifting way.” Writing about the Eyes on the Prize series, Hampton acknowledges the significance of his project in chronicling the history of the civil rights movement and the stories of those individuals who led, organized, and were involved in the extraordinary events of those times. Hampton and his team at Blackside were aware of the importance of their work and the powerful lessons of this history were not lost on them, as evidenced by the meticulous detail in which they gathered their stories and documented their processes. The thoroughness and thoughtfulness that went into a Hampton/Blackside production are evident in the materials that make up his archive. Like Voices of Freedom, which came about because only a fraction of the materials that Hampton gathered could be used in the finished televised program, his collection demands continual assessment and generation of resources that inform, inspire, and move people. As Hampton felt privileged, we at the Film & Media Archive similarly feel privileged to preserve his collection. Few people who spend any significant time in the archive are not affected and inspired by the power of the materials he has gathered and created. Hampton put excellence and innovation at the forefront of his work and this is reflected in his finished films and the breadth and depth of the archival materials in his collection. Henry Hampton Film Series The Henry Hampton Film Series premiered in 2014 and seeks to share documentary films made by filmmakers of color or that depict the stories of often underrepresented groups with a focus on the African American experience. The Henry Hampton Film Series is a great opportunity for audiences to see first-run documentaries before their general release and to meet and talk to visiting filmmakers. The Henry Hampton Film Series is a co-presentation of the Washington University Libraries and Cinema St. Louis. Henry Hampton (1940-98) was a St. Louis native and 1961 graduate of Washington University. In 1968, he established his Boston-based company Blackside, Inc. Blackside quickly became the largest African-American-owned film production company of its time. Hampton’s works chronicle the 20th century’s great political and social movements, focusing on the lives of the poor and disenfranchised. The Henry Hampton Collection is housed at Washington University Film & Media Archive. The 35,000-plus items in the Collection include film and videotape, photographs, scripts, storyboards, producers’ notes, interviews, music, narration, posters, study guides, books, and other materials. Previous screenings in the Henry Hampton Film Series Selected Q&A discussions available via our YouTube channel. 2020 River City Drumbeat, Q&A with directors Anne Flatté and Marlon Johnson; moderated by Andy Uhrich, curator of Film & Media at Washington University Libraries Unapologetic, Q&A with director Ashley O’Shay; moderated by Tila Neguse, project coordinator of The Divided City Initiative at the Center for the Humanities at Washington University 2019 The Apollo with producer Lisa Cortés, SLIFF Women in Film Award honoree 2018 Sighted Eyes/Feeling Heart, Q&A with director/producer Tracy Heather Strain and producer Randall MacLowry 2017 An Evening With Jon Else – Screening of an episode of Eyes on the Prize and Q&A discussion with Jon Else, author of True South: Henry Hampton and ‘Eyes on the Prize,’ the Landmark Television Series That Reframed the Civil Rights Movement Tell Them We Are Rising; there is an additional Q&A Session with co-director and SLIFF Contemporary Cinema Award honoree, Marco Williams 2016 Maya Angelou: And Still I Rise, Q&A with co-director Rita Coburn Whack, interviewee Alice Windom, and Poet Laureate of East St. Louis, Eugene Redmond Paris Is Burning, Q&A with featuring Steve Brawley of the St. Louis LGBT History Project along with performers Leon Braxton (aka Dieta Pepsi) and Maxi Glamour Agents of Change, co-director Abby Ginzberg’s page on the film; Frank Dawson co-directed 2015 The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution, Q&A with producer Laurens Grant Scarred Justice: The Orangeburg Massacre 1968, Q&A with producer Judy Richardson Streets of Greenwood (1963) and Lay My Burden Down (1966), Q&A with filmmaker Jack Willis 3 1/2 Minutes, Ten Bullets, Q&A with Lucy McBath and Ron Davis, the parents of Jordan Davis 2014 Through A Lens Darkly, Q&A with filmmaker Thomas Allen Harris Access these Materials Search the Henry Hampton Collection on MavisWeb Browse the Film & Media Archive’s YouTube Channel Explore the first series of Eyes on the Prize Interviews Explore the second series of Eyes on the Prize Interviews Plan Your Visit Contact Department Library Name Andy Uhrich Job Title Curator of Film and Media Email Address [email protected] Phone Number (314) 935-3301 Related Collections Digital Collections Film & Media Archive Collection Eyes on the Prize A 14-part series that is considered to be the definitive documentary on the Civil Rights Movement. View Collection about Eyes on the Prize Digital Collections Film & Media Archive Collection The Great Depression Interviews Each video and transcript details the stories of those struggling and surviving through The Great Depression. View Collection about The Great Depression Interviews Digital Collections Film & Media Archive Collection America’s War on Poverty Documentary and interviews covering events that took place after President Johnson declared an "unconditional war on poverty." View Collection about America’s War on Poverty For Students For Faculty For Staff For Visitors and Alumni Ask Us Staff Directory Make a Gift Intranet University Libraries MSC 1061-141-B Washington University in St. Louis One Brookings Dr. St. Louis, MO 63130 Instagram Facebook YouTube Vimeo © 2024 Washington University in St. Louis function fixLink() { if (window.Worker) { var worker = new Worker('https://libapps.wustl.edu/library/fixlink.js'); w.Onmessage= function(event) { var link = document.getElementById('menu-item-8958'); link.classList.add("menu-item--events"); }; } //var link = document.getElementById('menu-item-8958'); //link.classList.add("menu-item--events"); } //var delay = 1000; //setTimeout(fixLink, delay); -->

新利18 新利18体育全站APP中文版 新利18体育全站APP中文版 新利18正规不
Copyright ©新利18彩票靠谱吗|18luck新利 提现 The Paper All rights reserved.