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Available Magazines and Newspapers
Magazines:
American Visions; Black Enterprises; Ebony; Emerge; Essence; Jet;
National Black Review; The Progressive Woman.
Newspapers:
Black Issues in Higher Education; The Nation; New York Amsterdam
News; New York Review of Books.
Critical
Issues Lecture Series Video Collection
Archives:
The
Stanley Lawson Collection
The Stanley
Lawson Collection of Denver Post Clippings on African-American Life,
History, and Music, 1986-2001
Collection
Description
This
ensemble comprises clippings from the Denver Post as culled by Stanley
Lawson, a resident of Aurora, Colorado. Collectively, the clippings
illustrate coverage in the Denver Post of stories relating to African-American
peoples in the United States. Lawson identified two categories by
which he organized his collecting. The first of these areas encompass
all aspects of African-American life and history with the exception
of participation in jazz music, which Lawson designated as a specific
category in itself. In its processed state, the collection retains
Lawsons original organization.
Provenance
Lawson
sent his clippings to University of Connecticut history professor
Ugo Nwokeji in early 2002 for donation to the Institute for African-American
Studies. Thereafter, the articles were photocopied to archival standards
and organized chronologically by category, and the originals discarded.
The collection is available to researchers through the Institute
of African-American Studies.
Series
Description
Series
I, "African-American Issues: Clippings from The Denver Post,
1987-2001," constitutes the bulk of the collection and spans
a vast spectrum of African-American life and history. The clippings-from
the late twentieth century-examine incidents in the history of slavery
as well as acts of violence and discrimination against blacks in
the post-1865 era. However, primary focus is on the accomplishments
and triumphs of African-Americans in work, community, and sports
(especially baseball) since the mid-nineteenth century. The clippings
demonstrate an occasional emphasis on blacks in the Mid-West due
largely to the regional appeal of the Post.
Series
II, "Jazz Music: Clippings from The Denver Post, 1986-2001
," represents the Posts coverage of jazz music and its
history. Lawsons compilation here chronicles the history of
black jazz primarily through biographical information on leading
musicians such as Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, and Thelonious Monk,
often in the form of obituaries. Together, these clippings offer
a comprehensive view of the history of jazz music since 1930. The
series also includes several accounts of white jazz figures, whom
Lawson deemed worthy of inclusion.
Note
on Scope and Content
The collection
reflects the careful reading and dedication of one African-American
to preserving for posterity stories relevant to his heritageand
thereby the nations as well. Beyond this fact, Stanley Lawsons
clippings forge an important tool in understanding how a major newspaper
presented African-Americans and their history in the late twentieth
century. In this manner, the collection affords researchers an opportunity
to study the controversial issue of how the media portrays matters
of race through the lens of one specific newspaper, the Denver Post.
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