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    An Examination of How Archives Have Influenced the Telling of the Story of Philadelphia's Civil Rights Movement

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    Genre
    Thesis/Dissertation
    Date
    2011
    Author
    Borden, Sara
    Advisor
    Bruggeman, Seth C., 1975-
    Committee member
    Sly, Margery N.
    Jenkins, Wilbert L., 1953-
    Department
    History
    Subject
    American History
    African American Studies
    Library Science
    African American History
    Archives
    Civil Rights
    History
    Web Sites
    Permanent link to this record
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/834
    
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    DOI
    http://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/816
    Abstract
    This paper examines the way that history and the archive interact with an examination of the civil rights movement in Philadelphia in the 1960s. Lack of accessibility may detrimentally affect historians' analyses. This paper is an assessment of what both writers and archivists can do to help diminish oversights. Included is an investigation of the short-lived Black Coalition and the way the organization is represented in scholarship. How do the representations differ from the story the primary sources tell? Also examined is the relationship between Cecil B. Moore and Martin Luther King, Jr. What primary sources exist that illuminate their friendship? How has their friendship been portrayed in secondary works? The paper outlines the discovery of video footage of the two men and how this footage complicates widely-held perceptions of their association. Lastly, this thesis offers remedies to allow for greater accessibility of primary source documents, most notably the role of digitization within the archive. Included in these suggestions are analyses of existing digital initiatives and suggestions for future projects. Digitization initiatives may be the means by which to bridge the gap currently facing archivists and historians today.
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