Emma Willard

In her keynote address at the second annual Barry Lawrence Ruderman Conference on Cartography: Gender, Sexuality, Cartography, at the David Rumsey Map Center at Green Library, Stanford University, October 10-12, 2019, Professor Susan Schulten of the University of Denver will discuss a manuscript geography book compiled by one of the first few women in America to receive a higher education under the tutelage of pioneer educator Emma Willard: Eliza Henshaw. Professor Schulten writes, "My lecture will focus on the proliferation of map drawing in the decades after the revolution, particularly among young women. Eliza Henshaw’s geography journal, part of the Dobkin Collection, illuminates those practices well, especially since she was a start pupil of Emma Willard at the Middlebury Female Academy." As part of her presentation, Professor Schulten will provide a reproduction of a page from Eliza Henshaw's journal. "I hope to join Eliza’s image with a geography journal most likely made by her younger sister, Frances, in 1823. You can see the images from that journal (quite different from Eliza’s made under Willard’s direction!) here in the Rumsey Collection within Stanford University Library."

 

The Critical Edition of Hannah Arendt

Thomas Wild, Wout Cornelissen, and Barbara Hahn, for The Critical Edition of Hannah Arendt, reviewed the Collection's holdings of Arendt's literary executor Jerome Kohn, including significant Mary McCarthy correspondence and Arendt's annotated copy of The Origins of Totalitarianism. They will be publishing a digital edition of our early typescript of Rahel Varnhagen in 2020.

Willa Cather

The Collection's letters by Willa Cather - over 250, largely to her publisher Alfred A. Knopf - have been included by editors Andrew Jewell and Janis P. Stout in their comprehensive scholarly digital edition, The Complete Letters of Willa Cather (2018-2019) as part of The Willa Cather Archive; and selectively included in The Selected Letters of Willa Cather (NY: Knopf, 2013).

Sylvia Plath

Editors Peter K. Steinberg and Karen V. Kukil published the Collection's 1954 letter and poems from Plath to Ramona Maher in The Letters of Sylvia Plath, Volume 1: 1940-1956 (Faber and Faber/HarperCollins, 2017).

Djuna Barnes

Peter Adkins used Collection materials relating to Djuna Barnes and Vita Sackville-West towards his PhD thesis, Modernist Anthropocene Aesthetics: Ecological Innovation in the novels of James Joyce, Djuna Barnes and Virginia Woolf (2019). He writes, "My work engages with archival materials in order to reassess the way in which modernist writers were interested in the nonhuman world. Both Djuna Barnes and Vita Sackville-West are writers for whom questions of nature and the natural world necessarily also involve questions of sex, gender and sexuality."

Janie Porter Barrett

Dr. Wilma Peebles-Wilkins worked with the Collection's Janie Barrett Archive to substantially update her online essay, "Janie Porter Barrett," for the Encyclopedia of Social Work (Oxford University Press, 2016). She writes, "Much of my work involves social welfare biographical essays of pioneering African American women who were dedicated to social justice and uplift in the historic African American community."

Katharine Burdekin

Elizabeth English worked with the Katharine Burdekin Archive in the Collection for Lesbian Modernism: Censorship, Sexuality and Genre Fiction (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2015; paperback 2017).

Sarah Collins Fernandis

Blake Wilder, at the University of Maryland, examined the Collection's copy of Sarah Collins Fernandis's 1925 Poems in researching "Black Motherhood and the Politics of Fulfillment in the poetry of Sarah Collins Fernandis" - a working paper to be presented at the American Literature Association conference in Boston in May 2019. Wilder writes, "This work on Fernandis is part of the early stage research of a book project about black women in the Baltimore and Washington D.C. area in the early twentieth century who were actively engaged in community building and social work but who were also authors. This project is interested in how these women understood literary and imaginative writing as part of or related to the civic work that they also did."

Julia Emily Gordon

Neil Cooke consulted the Collection's diary of Gordon recounting her travels in France, Belgium and along the river Rhine, mostly in the company of Major Orlando Felix. "My interest being that Lieutenant Felix, a rifleman, had been in Wellington’s army at the Battle of Waterloo, and during the visit to Belgium, Felix accompanied Gordon on a visit to the battlefield - the hope being that he may have revealed further details about his part in the battle." Cooke notes that Gordon painted several watercolours during the journey, a few of which are in the collections of the Tate Gallery in London. Cooke generously provided a transcript of the diary, with notes about the various people and events described.  

The Manuscript Cookbook Survey

Food historian Stephen Schmidt analyzed manuscript cookbooks in the Collection, at times dating material to a period of just a few years and locating its point of origin based on recipes and ingredients. Six of our cookbooks fit the criteria for the Manuscript Cookbook Survey, a Pine Needles Foundation Project spearheaded by Szilvia Szmuk-Tanenbaum.

Marjorie Beeton

Hugh Sebag-Montefiore quoted from Marjorie Beeton's diary in Somme: Into The Breach (Penguin 2016), mentioning some of her comments from July 1916 as the Battle of the Somme began. "She was describing what she witnessed when working at a hospital in Rouen France during the days following that first terrible day (I July 1916) when approaching 60,000 Allied soldiers were killed and wounded. She was describing how the fall out from the unsuccessful 1 July attack affected those like her who had to care for the wounded."

Susan B. Anthony

Ann Brubaker Greenleaf Wirtz is the great-granddaughter of Mary Ursula Kessler Vandivert, who co-founded the Tuesday P.M. Club in 1895 with Annie Pillsbury Young. For her book Daughter of the Greatest Generation, An American Memoir, Wirtz called upon the Collection's Anthony letter addressed to Mrs. Annie Pillsbury Young, The Tuesday P.M. Club, Manhattan, Kansas, dated Jan. 13, 1903.

Dora Carrington

Sue Fox fact-checked one of the Collection's Carrington letters - against a previously published transcription - for a new edition of Carrington’s Letters edited by Anne Chisholm  (Chatto & Windus 2017).

Dr. Alice Bunker Stockham

Laurie Jill Strickland looked to our copy of The Lover's World: A Wheel of Life, by Dr. Alice Bunker Stockham, in her research towards "Reaching for Something Higher: The Life and Legacy of Dr. Alice Bunker Stockham" -  a book and film about Dr. Stockham and her pioneering contemporaries of the time, who, she writes, "were visionaries of feminism, our unsung 'mothers' of the suffragette movement, innovating women's rights, as well as  economic, marital and sexual freedoms. This includes  many women of early feminism who are yet largely unknown (like Ida Craddock and others). These women, very much 'invisible' in early feminist history, are given a voice in this project." Strickland notes, "We plan to eventually have an art exhibit and talks when the project opens in collaboration with the Women's History Museum in D.C. and the Jean-Louis Bourgeois and Louise Bourgeois Foundation in partnership with Grayce Productions. We are also creating an accompanying archive of materials and epherma of the times that will be housed at the Women's History Museum in honor of all the women and their remarkable stories and in honor of the legacy of Louis Bourgeois and the themes she explored in her work."

Dr. Annie Ramborger

Catherine Morana included the Collection's photograph of Dr. Annie Ramborger in "Rarer than Hens' Teeth - Women Dentists in the 19th Century" (Your Oral Health, Supplement Ontario Dentist (Summer/Fall 2017), p.15). She notes, "While Dr Annie Ramborger was not the first woman to become a dentist, her case was useful to explore as it offered specifics as to the reasons why some men objected to women being trained as dentists. ... [She] addressed the prejudice about women in dentistry front on – eventually challenging these prejudices in open court, which is where the objections were publicly aired." She notes, "Due to space limitations the article couldn’t mention everything I wanted to include about 'Fannie.'  But there is a wonderful note you can add to Ramborger’s story:  She graduated third in her class and opened up a very successful dental practice, earning $6,000 US per year – a sizeable sum.  Her practice focused on treating female patients.  And she enjoyed her money – working nine months a year and travelling the remaining 3 months!   (A real fire-cracker!)." A download of Morana's article is available through this link: https://www.dobkinfeminism.org/item-page/?id=4655858

Valerie Solanas

Breanne Fahs reviewed the Collection's correspondence between Ti-Grace Atkinson and Valerie Solanas for Valerie Solanas: The Defiant Life of the Woman Who Wrote SCUM (and Shot Andy Warhol) (NY: Feminist Press, 2014).

Buffie Johnson

Matthew Geyer worked with artist Buffie Johnson's letters to Ruth Ford in researching Johnson's voice and character for his novel about the life of Mark Rothko, who met Johnson in Los Angeles in 1943.  She introduced Rothko to Peggy Guggenheim later that year in New York, which led to his first one-man exhibition at Art of This Century on 57th Street.  Johnson and Rothko remained friends until his death in 1970, and she figures as prominently in the manuscript as she did in his life.

Alice Stopford-Green

Angus S. C. Mitchell consulted the Collection's letters from Alice Stopford Green to Robert Lynd, for an article currently undergoing peer review. Mitchell has written a good deal about Stopford Green over the years, and recently published "The Stopfords of Blackwater House" about her family.

Additional scholarship

The Dobkin Family Collection of Feminism has been a source of primary information - through scans, photographs, and on-site visits - for over one hundred and fifty scholars, many of whose projects will be added to this list over time. Some researchers - including three novelists, the creator of a musical theater piece, and several genealogical writers - prefer to keep their projects under wraps.

If you have worked with the Collection and would like your project noted, please contact us.