#  Collections &amp; Projects 

 



##  Collections 

 



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###    Chinua Achebe Papers  expand\_more  

 

Manuscripts of Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe’s main publications from *Arrow of God* (1964) to *Anthills of the Savannah* (1987) and of a few later occasional writings until 1993; with some publishers’ correspondence. For more information, please contact Houghton Library at 617.495.2449.

 

 

 



###    James Baldwin Manuscript  expand\_more  

 

Undated typescript of an unfinished play by novelist, playwright, and essayist James Baldwin (1924–1987) titled “The Welcome Table.” The document contains numbering changes, inserted pages, and two different types of paper suggesting various revisions. A central character of the play, Peter Davis, is based on Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Director of the Hutchins Center for African &amp; African American Research. For more information, please contact Houghton Library at 617.495.2449.

 

 

 



###    Angela Y. Davis Papers  expand\_more  

 

The papers of Angela Y. Davis document her work as a scholar, critical theorist, public intellectual, and political activist. The collection holds diaries; correspondence; drafts of writings and speeches; teaching syllabi and research; organizational records and files from the Communist Party and a number of organizations Davis founded or was involved in; research files on political prisoners, international liberation movements, the prison industrial complex, and other topics; legal files, correspondence, and publicity material from the 1972 trial of People v. Angela Y. Davis, as well as letters and fabric banners sent to Davis from around the world while she was in jail between 1970 and 1972; files documenting Davis's status as an international public speaker; photographs of and by Davis; political pins and buttons; and audiotapes and videotapes of many of Davis's speeches and public appearances. For more information, please contact Houghton Library at 617.495.2449.

 

 

 



###    Shirley Graham Du Bois Papers  expand\_more  

 

Papers of influential artist and activist Shirley Graham Du Bois (1896–1977), the second wife of W. E. B. Du Bois. They include her personal correspondence, private papers, professional work, and photographs.

For inquiries, contact the Schlesinger Library reference desk (617.495.8540) or the general inquiry line at <ask@radcliffe.libanswers.com>.



 

 

 



###    June Jordan Papers  expand\_more  

 

Papers of June Jordan (1936–2002), author of *Kissing God Goodbye*, poet, prolific writer, outspoken activist, professor, and champion of equal rights. The bulk of the papers span 1954–2002 and contain biographical material, personal and professional correspondence, notes, drafts of published readings, recordings (mostly audio) of poetry writings, and photographs.

For inquiries, contact the Schlesinger Library reference desk (617.495.8540) or the general inquiry line at <ask@radcliffe.libanswers.com>.



 

 

 



###    Adrienne Kennedy Papers  expand\_more  

 

The papers of Adrienne Kennedy include biographical information on Kennedy and her extended family; play scripts and related material (including correspondence, publicity, and reviews); drafts of published writings including her memoir, People Who Led to My Plays; unpublished essays and manuscript drafts; a small amount of material related to her teaching career, including syllabi for a class taught at Harvard; and photographs of Kennedy and her family and friends. Correspondence (including email) with family and friends is also included. Arranged in 5 series: I. Biographical and Personal. II. Plays. III. Other Writings. IV. Teaching. V. Photographs and Audiovisual.

For inquiries, contact the Schlesinger Library reference desk (617.495.8540) or the general inquiry line at <ask@radcliffe.libanswers.com>.



 

 

 



###    Jamaica Kincaid Papers  expand\_more  

 

Kincaid is a well-known and well-respected novelist and essayist. Early in her writing career, she was hired by William Shawn, the legendary editor of *The New Yorker*, as a staff writer, then a regular “Talk of the Town” columnist; she was a contributor for some 20 years. She has published five novels, five non-fiction books, a children’s book, and numerous short stories and essays. The archive includes manuscripts and working drafts or all her books through her most recent novel, *See Now Then* (2013); journals and notebooks; voluminous correspondence; photographs and family documents; digital media; and copies of all her books and magazine appearances. The archive documents not only Kincaid’s life as a writer, but her perspective as a Caribbean immigrant and working woman, and is an important addition to Houghton’s collection of American literary archives. For more information, please contact Houghton Library at 617.495.2449.

 

 

 



###    Juan Latino Papers  expand\_more  

 

 *Juan Latino, 1518?–1596. Ad catholicvm, et invictissimvm Philippvm Dei gratia Hispaniarum regem, de augusta, memorabili, simul &amp; catholica regalium corporum ex varijs tumulis in vnum regale templum translatione . . . epigrãmatum siue epitaphiorum, libri duo per magistrum Ioannem Latinum Garnatae adolesctiae moderatorem . . .* \[Granada, 1576\]. Houghton Library.

   
 The son of a black slave, Juan Latino was educated along with his master’s son, and soon demonstrated his precocious talent, receiving a degree from the University of Granada at the age of 28. He went on to teach at the Cathedral School in Granada for 20 years. Famous for his epic Latin poems, in which he reflected on the condition of blacks and disputed any religious justification for slavery of Africans, this is his rare second book of poetry. For more information, please contact Houghton Library at 617.495.2449.



 

 

 



###    Celia and Henry W. McGee III Black Film Poster Collection  expand\_more  

 

This historically rich poster collection, generously underwritten by Celia (AB ’73) and Henry W. McGee III (AB ’74, MBA ’79), highlights the African American experience as it has been cinematically captured by such silent films as *The Crimson Skull* and *Black Gold*, Blaxploitation cult favorites *Sweet Sweetback’s Baadaasssss Song*, *Shaft*, and *Friday Foster*, as well as popular musicals like *The Wiz* and *Sparkle*. Located at the Hutchins Center, 617.495.8508.

 

 

 



###    Albert Murray Papers  expand\_more  

 

This collection comprises the papers of Albert Murray, noted cultural critic and co-founder of Jazz at Lincoln Center. Papers include his writings, notes, and correspondence with Ralph Ellison. Part of this collection was published in 2000 as *Trading Twelves: The Selected Letters of Ralph Ellison and Albert Murray*. For more information, please contact Houghton Library at 617.495.2449.

 

 

 



###    Suzan-Lori Parks Papers  expand\_more  

 

The papers of Suzan-Lori Parks (2001 recipient of a MacArthur Foundation “Genius” Award and the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for her play *Topdog/Underdog*) include manuscripts of her writings and some correspondence. For more information, please contact Houghton Library at 617.495.2449.

 

 

 



###    Roscoe Simmons Collection  expand\_more  

 

The Roscoe Simmons Collection is a rich archive of papers, sound recordings, and memorabilia collected by highly esteemed political strategist and journalist, Roscoe Conkling Simmons (1878–1951). The first African American columnist for the Chicago Tribune and a staunch Republican, Simmons was often consulted and enlisted on matters related to the African American community by Presidents Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover. Items in this collection include Simmons’s personal correspondence with the Republican National Committee, documentation during World War I of African, African American, and Asian soldiers, as well as copies of rare African American periodicals like *The Blue Helmet*. For more information, please contact the Harvard Archives at 617.495.2461.

 

 

 



###    Wole Soyinka Papers  expand\_more  

 

The papers of Wole Soyinka, 1986 Nobel Prize Winner for Literature, includes manuscripts, correspondence, and records of his human rights activities, as well as “Prison Diary” typescripts (notes penned between the lines of printed books while he was incarcerated) and Union of Writers of the African Peoples materials. For more information, please contact Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library at 617.495.2449.

 

 

 



###    Randy Weston Collection  expand\_more  

 

In 2015–16, the Jazz Research Initiative in collaboration with the Hutchins Center, Loeb Music Library, the Harvard College Library, and the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences acquired the archives of pianist and composer Randy Weston. Weston’s archive offers a rare glimpse into the world of the artist, ambassador, and businessman. The documentation of Weston’s life comes in all forms and from every period of his prolific career, creating a study in both the cultural history of America in the mid-1950s and the inner workings of a musical master. The impressively comprehensive archive contains hundreds of manuscripts, scores, videos, films, photographs, and more than 1,000 tape recordings. For more information, please contact the Loeb Music Library at 617.495.2794.

 

 

 



###    John Edgar Wideman Papers  expand\_more  

 

This collection of author John Edgar Wideman’s papers includes manuscripts of his novels, short stories and articles, extensive research files for his memoir, and correspondence. For more information, please contact Houghton Library at 617.495.2449.

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

##  Projects 

 



  [### AfricaMap / WorldMap Project

 ](/africamapworldmap-project) 

   [### African American Civil Rights Leaders and the Roosevelts

 ](/african-american-civil-rights-leaders-and-roosevelts) 

   [### Archaeological Excavations in the Meroitic Cemetery at Berber

 ](/archaeological-excavations-meroitic-cemetery-berber) 

   [### Archive of African American Folklore

 ](/archive-african-american-folklore) 

   [### Biographies of the Enslaved at the Hutchins Center at Harvard

 ](/biographies-enslaved-hutchins-center-harvard) 

   [### Black Patriots Project

 ](/black-patriots-project) 

   [### Black Periodical Literature Project

 ](/black-periodical-literature-project) 

   [### Central Africa Diaspora to the Americas Project

 ](/central-africa-diaspora-americas-project) 

   [### Cuba and the United States in the Atlantic Slave Trade (1789–1820)

 ](/cuba-us-slave-trade) 

   [### Enslaved.org: Peoples of the Historical Slave Trade

 ](/enslaved) 

   [### Finding Your Roots Curriculum Project

 ](/finding-your-roots-curriculum-project) 

   [### History Design Studio

 ](/history-design-studio-hds) 

   [### Jazz Research Initiative

 ](/jazz-research-initiative) 

   [### Legacies of British Slave-Ownership

 ](/legacies-british-slave-ownership) 

   [### Liberated Africans Project

 ](/liberated-africans-project) 

   [### National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Institute

 ](/neh-summer-institute) 

   [### Oxford Dictionary of African American English (ODAAE)

 ](/odaae) 

   [### Selma Online

 ](/selma-online) 

   [### Southern Reconstruction Fund

 ](/southern-reconstruction-fund) 

   [### Timbuktu Library Project

 ](/timbuktu-library-project) 

   [### Traces of Slavery: A Database of the African Ethnic Groups Mapped in Cuba

 ](/traces-slavery-database-african-ethnic-groups-mapped-cuba) 

   [### Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database

 ](/trans-atlantic-slave-trade-database) 

   [### W. E. B. Du Bois Society

 ](/w-e-b-dubois-society) 

   [### Willis M. Carter Project

 ](/willis-m-carter-collection) 

   [### Workshop on African History and Economics

 ](/workshop-african-history-and-economics)