Sent to you by Tee via Google Reader: UMass to put papers of W.E.B. Du
Bois online via Black Politics on the Web by The Admin on 4/3/09
The University of Massachusetts in Amherst said Friday it would scan,
catalog, digitize and put online papers of civil rights movement
pioneer W.E.B. Du Bois.

The university’s W.E.B. Du Bois Library has an estimated 100,000
diaries, letters, photographs and other items related to Du Bois, who
helped found the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People.

“What we’re looking to do is spark conversation about difficult issues
in race, inequality, class and all these things are things that
concerned Du Bois,” said Robert Cox, director of the special
collections at the library.

UMass received a $200,000 grant from the Verizon Foundation to put the
collection online during the two-year project, which begins in July.

The collection includes correspondence with other influential
African-Americans, such as Booker T. Washington and Langston Hughes, as
well as important public figures of his day, such as Albert Einstein
and Mohandas Gandhi.

One of Cox’s favorite pieces is a menu signed by those who attended the
first meeting of the Niagara Movement, a precursor to the NAACP. The
group was forced to meet in Ontario, Canada, because no restaurant in
Buffalo, N.Y., would serve them.

Shirley Graham Du Bois donated her husband’s papers to the Amherst
campus in 1973. W.E.B. Du Bois was born in nearby Great Barrington in
1868. He died in Ghana in 1963.

Du Bois wrote more than 4,000 articles, essays and books, many of which
are now out of print or difficult to find, Cox said. While dozens of
universities have microfilm copies of Du Bois work, the new online
archive will allow anyone to search his words from anywhere.

“Once we get the word out there, we’re going to reach people who never
knew about UMass, never knew about Du Bois,” Cox said.

He said it’s not just scholars and researchers who are interested in Du
Bois’ work, but also community and political activists.

“Du Bois fit that intersection between academia and public action, and
the people who use the collection often do the same,” Cox said.

Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr., the director of Harvard Univesity’s
W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research who
edited a compilation of Du Bois’ writings, said much of Du Bois’ never
published works and early drafts are hard to find.

“It’s long been obvious to me that no printed editions of his work have
even begun to touch the complexity and the vast extent of his
writings,” Gates said. “Digitizing these works will lead to a
renaissance in scholarship about the greatest thinker of African
descent in history.”

MELISSA TRUJILLO, AP

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