Tucker Pamella FarleyPapers 1969-2010

ArchivalResource

Tucker Pamella FarleyPapers 1969-2010

Author; Labor organizer; Lesbian activist; Professor, English; Professor, Women'sStudies. The papers contain materials from her academic career and study groups. Most material is related to Marxist Feminist Group 1 (MF 1) which include an extensive amount of discussion notes, minutes, planning materials, and publications. The group's topics ranged significantly over the years, and have included socialism, homophobia, racism, and postmodernism. Some records also exist of her participation in early women's studies courses, research, and conferences. The collection contains draft and published writings by Farley on the subjects of women in literature, women's self-narratives, and the history of women's studies.

3 boxes; (2.25 linear ft.)

eng,

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SNAC Resource ID: 6323158

Related Entities

There are 2 Entities related to this resource.

Farley, Tucker Pamella

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6j26cqq (person)

Tucker Pamella Farley is an activist and academic who helped create a space for women's studies in the university. She has been active in a variety of social justice causes. Farley earned her bachelor's degree from Oberlin College in 1961, and as a graduate student at Pennsylvania State University in the late 1960s, she became involved in Leftist activist efforts aimed at radicalizing the university. She organized for academic labor unions, and she participated in the Radical Caucus...

Brooklyn College. Theatre Research Data Center

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6m6658d (corporateBody)

Curator's Office was renamed Bursar's Office. From the description of Curator's reports, 1934-1943. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 155451274 The Ditmas House was a Dutch style wooden frame house built in 1827 and occupied by the Ditmas family. A century later, Charles Ditmas, the founder of Kings County Historical Society, helped to make way for Brooklyn's Ditmas farmhouse to become the site for part of the Brooklyn College campus. In 1935, the Ditmas House passed into the c...