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What is Research?

October 28, 2020, Filed Under: Featured1, Research + Teaching

Curating Fugitive Findings and the right to research slowly

by DIANA SILVEIRA LEITE and GAILA SIMS This essay is part of a slow research series, What is Research? On February 7, 2019 we opened the display of Fugitive Findings: How Artists of Color Survive in the Archives. Presented in two display cases on the second floor in front of the… read more 

ABOUT DIANA SILVEIRA LEITE
Diana Silveira Leite is a doctoral candidate in the Program in Comparative Literature and Graduate School Continuing Fellow at The University of Texas at Austin. Her dissertation, “Romanticism’s Discontents: Writing Black Personhood in Nineteenth-Century Brazil,” examines Afro-Brazilian literature from the Romantic period, focusing on slave narratives and abolitionist texts. She holds a M.A. in British Studies from Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin and B.A. degrees in English and History from The University of Texas at Austin.

ABOUT GAILA SIMS
Gaila Sims is a doctoral candidate in American Studies at the University of Texas at Austin. Her dissertation, “Imprimatur of the State: Interpretation of Slavery at American History Museums,” explores how state history museums exhibit on the history of enslavement in the United States. Originally from Riverside, California, she received her M.A. in American Studies from the University of Texas at Austin and her B.A. in History and African American Studies from Oberlin College.

October 21, 2020, Filed Under: Featured1, Research + Teaching

Taking time to teach hidden histories in the archives

This essay is part of a slow research series, What is Research? The students stand, pencil and paper in hand, before the display window in the Harry Ransom Center’s seminar room. Behind the glass are an array of objects from the Center’s archives: Arthur Miller’s handwritten notes on a draft… read more 

October 14, 2020, Filed Under: Books + Manuscripts, Featured1, Research + Teaching

Learning how to read again

This essay is part of a slow research series, What is Research? Part of what is so compelling about doing research with old books is that the learning curve never ends—there’s always some new challenge, another thing to explain, something else to get to the bottom of. Reading old books… read more 

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