Clara Thomas Fonds Inventory #432

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Clara Thomas Fonds Inventory #432 page 1 SERIES FILE LIST - S00018 Clara Thomas fonds Inventory #432 Call #: File: Title: Date(s): Note: 1995-002/008 (1) Clara Thomas on York University 1978, 1981 1995-002/008 (2) Honorary Degree (York). [includes 13 colour June 1986 photos] 1995-002/008 (3) Honorary Degree (Trent). [includes 4 colour May 1991 photos] 1995-002/008 (4) Honorary Degree (Brock). [includes 18 colour June 1992 photos] 1995-002/008 (5) PhD Parchment - Royal Society 1982 1995-002/008 (6) Thomas, Clara (Birthday Cards) 1995-002/008 (7) Thomas, Clara (Christmas Cards) 1995-002/008 (8) Thomas, Clara (Illness & Operation) 1988 1995-002/008 (9) Thomas, Morley 1995-002/008 (10) Northrop, Frye - England 1965 1995-002/008 (11) Anne Welwood. "Judith's Fish" 1977 1995-002/008 (12) Notes on Strathroy, Ont. 1 of 3 1995-002/008 (13) Notes on Strathroy, Ont. 2 of 3 1995-002/008 (14) Notes on Strathroy, Ont. 3 of 3 1995-002/008 (15) Strathroy - C. Thomas, Personal 1995-002/008 (16) WW I, II letters from Vernon Sullivan, Vernon McCandless, and Alfred Brandon Conron. Typescript copies. 1995-002/009 (1) Western Extension, 1956-1957. [University of Western Ontario - Extension Dept.] 1995-002/009 (2) Re: William Arthur Deacon 1982 1995-002/009 (3) C. Thomas - Royal Society 1983 1995-002/009 (4) Thomas, Clara (Retirement). [includes 3 1984 colour photos] 1995-002/009 (5) Northern Telecom Award 1989 1995-002/009 (6) Photos [67 photos: b&w, col.) 1995-002/009 (7) Photos [21 photos: b&w, col.) 1995-002/009 (8) Yearly Log 1971-1987 1995-002/009 (9) Northrop Frye Newsletter 1988-1994 1995-002/009 (10) C. Thomas - Personal correspondence, 1929-1994 notes 1995-002/010 (1) Thomas, Clara - C.V. & Biography 1984, 1995 1996-038/003 (11) Strathroy: historical info, flyer of Thomas 1996-038/003 (12) Strathroy: Age Dispatch re J.K.Galbraith 1996-038/003 (13) Sullivan, Vernon, from Jean Polasck, and bio 2 Feb. 1996 1996-038/003 (14) Sullivan, Vernon, Letters from the West 1996-038/003 (18) Thomas, Clara UWO English Grads meet(1949-Free Press?) 1996-038/003 (21) Thomas, Clara, Distinguished Alumni Award, May 29, - Oct. 20, 1995 UWO. page 2 SERIES FILE LIST - S00018 Clara Thomas fonds Inventory #432 Call #: File: Title: Date(s): Note: 1996-038/003 (23) Thomas, Clara, Article in Excalibur (Women Oct. 18, 1995 at York) 1996-038/003 (25) Thomas, Clara and Morley, Photos, Jamaica Dec. 1984 etc. One b&w, 25 colour. Incl. "Bramble Susie" by Donna E. Smyth. 1996-038/003 (27) Thomas, Clara Retirement Party Guestbook May 31, 1984 1996-038/003 (28) Thomas, Clara, One photo of Strathroy House, colour. 1996-038/004 (2) Thomas, Clara - Nineteen colour 1992 photographs, Brock University, Swatman family (Strathroy). 1996-038/004 (7) Trent University - Honorary Degree, May 31, 1991 1996-038/004 (8) University of New Brunswick Feb.6 - April 5, 1995. 1996-038/004 (9) University of New Brunswick: June April 11-June 21, 1995 conference - "The Poetics of the Self" 1996-038/004 (21) York Faculty - one b&w photograph 1961 1997-045/002 (30) Thomas Family photograph 1963 1997-045/002 (41) World War II 1996 1999-075/001 (31) Thomas, Clara, 80th birthday May 1999 1999-075/001 (32) Thomas, Clara, Founders induction pictures 1999 1999-075/001 (33) Thomas, Clara, retirement 1984 1999-075/001 (74) Thomas, Morley, WWI letters to Nellie 1999 Auckland 1999-075/001 (93) McCandless, Mabel, old boys, Strathroy 1930 1999-075/001 (100) Stepler, Dorothy 1899, 1918, 1936-1943, 1998-1999 1999-075/001 (105) Thomas, Morley, meteorology celebration 1990 1999-075/001 (107) Retirement party photographs 1984 2000-077/001 (5) A.B. Conron, Letters from overseas to C. 1941-1945, 1950-1953 Thomas 2000-077/001 (28) Martha McCandless 2000 2000-077/001 (29) Martha McCandless (Grandmother), photograph 2000-077/001 (30) Vernon McCandless, death March 2000 2000-077/001 (33) Obituary notices: Earle Sanborn, Frank 2000 Fidler, Caroline Conron 2000-077/002 (1) Strathroy - articles, education 2000 2000-077/002 (2) Strathroy - hospital, etc. 2000 2000-077/002 (3) Will and Rachel Sullivan and family, photograph 2000-077/002 (4) Clara Thomas, 1962 PhD. oral history exam abstract, graduation 2000-077/002 (6) Clara Thomas, picture in front room, picture 1986 of Morley 2000-077/002 (9) Thomas family 2000 page 3 SERIES FILE LIST - S00018 Clara Thomas fonds Inventory #432 Call #: File: Title: Date(s): Note: 2001-055/001 (13) Martha McCandless 2001 2001-055/001 (24) Clara Thomas, Trent U. 1992 2001-055/001 (25) Clara Thomas, Northern Telecom Award 1989 2001-055/001 (26) Clara Thomas, Beginning of English Studies 1999 in Canada 2001-055/001 (27) Clara Thomas, Edith Fowke, obituary, Royal [1996] Society 2001-055/001 (30) Clara Thomas, York Founder 1999 2001-055/001 (31) Clara Thomas, photographs (including book 1923, 1976-1989 launch for Deacon) 2001-055/001 (32) Morley Thomas, article 2001-055/001 (33) Morley Thomas, Massey Medal 1985 2001-055/001 (34) Steve Thomas, "A Gift for Steve's Fiftieth" by 1995 Clara Thomas 2001-055/001 (40) Clara Thomas, Honorary Degree, York 1986 2001-055/002 (10) Stathroy Collegiate 2001 2001-055/002 (12) Clara Thoma, Remembering Annie (Fidler) 2001 on her 90th Birthday 2002-053/001 (4) Fowke, Edith, Programme of Memorial, York; 1996 Tribute, C. Thomas 2002-053/001 (8) McCandless, Vernon (Flight Sergeant, 1944-1945 R.C.A.F.), Typescript of Letters to Mrs. Basil McCandless 2002-053/001 (16) Notebook, U.W.O., 1937; timetable 1937-[ca. 1957] 1940/11941; Lectures Summer School, [ca. 1957] 2002-053/001 (17) Personal Memoirs 1883, 1919, 1957-1982 1 of 2 2002-053/001 (18) Personal Memoirs 1883, 1919, 1957-1982 2 of 2 2002-053/001 (40) Photographs - Thomas family, Morley, Clara, [ca. 1982] Steve, John 2002-053/001 (43) Book, Strathroy Lives 2001 2003-051/001 (8) Maurice Elliott, University Professor, Address 2002 2003-051/001 (9) Entrance Examinations, 1898 2002 2003-051/001 (10) Henry Girling Memorial 2001 2003-051/001 (11) Kent Haworth Symposium 2003 2003-051/001 (12) Kent Haworth, Tribute by Clara Thomas 2003 2003-051/001 (16) Wilfrid and Elsie Jury, The Jury Family 2003 Legacies.
Recommended publications
  • Libraries and Cultural Resources
    LIBRARIES AND CULTURAL RESOURCES Archives and Special Collections Suite 520, Taylor Family Digital Library 2500 University Drive NW Calgary, AB, Canada T2N 1N4 www.asc.ucalgary.ca Malcolm Ross fonds. ACU SPC F0027 https://searcharchives.ucalgary.ca/malcolm-ross-fonds An additional finding aid in another format may exist for this fonds or collection. Inquire in Archives and Special Collections. MALCOLM ROSS fonds MsC 18 The Malcolm Ross Fonds MsC 18 CORRESPONDENCE .......................................................................................................................... 2 Correspondence from Canadian writers, and Canadian and American academics .................. 20 CORRESPONDENCE RELATING TO NEW CANADIAN LIBRARY SERIES, MCCLELLAND AND STEWART ....................................................................................................................................................... 24 PUBLISHED WORK BY MALCOLM ROSS ......................................................................................... 50 ABOUT MALCOLM ROSS ................................................................................................................ 50 ABOUT NEW CANADIAN LIBRARY SERIES ...................................................................................... 52 Page 2 MALCOLM ROSS fonds MsC 18 FILE TITLE DATE BOX/FILE Biographical material about M. Ross [197- (?)] 1.1 - typescript (photocopy) and typescript CORRESPONDENCE Academic letters and documents 1934-April 5, 1962 1.2 - arranged chronologically: • E.E. Stoll
    [Show full text]
  • "Surfacing" and "The Diviners"
    FOLKLORE, POPULAR CULTURE & INDIVIDUARON IN "SURFACING" AND "THE DIVINERS" Terry Goldie СIONTEMPORARY CANADIAN FICTION includes a number of works which reject modern technology and turn to some form of knowledge which might be described as traditional or primitive. In a review of a prime example, Surfacing, Bruce King states, "The search for roots in the past and some better life in contrast to modern urban civilization is widespread at present and the novel may be said to record an extreme representation of the new romanticism and a critique of it."1 Clara Thomas suggests something similar in an article on a comparable work, The Diviners: "The passing on of an authentic heritage of their people is a central preoccupation of writers of today, particularly of writers of the post-colonial nations."2 This similarity between the two novels, however, hides certain important, although perhaps subtle, distinctions. In each novel, the central character, the narrator, is a woman going through a search for identity, what Jung referred to as individuation, "becoming one's own self."3 Each is inspired by a mystical, non- or even pre-rational knowledge, removed from contemporary technology. In Surfacing, however, the only such knowledge is found in a distant past and in isolation. In The Diviners, there is a feeling that while the quest for identity requires an exploration of the past it must also be shaped by the present and by those a sociologist would call the "significant others," parents, children, lovers, and friends. Elsewhere I have observed that the search for self often takes the form of an interest in folklore,4 a diffuse assemblage of what could be defined as "The tradi- tional beliefs, legends, and customs, current among the common people."5 Con- temporary folklorists would see this definition as far too limiting but it fits com- mon usage.
    [Show full text]
  • The Men of Manawaka: an Entrance to the Works of Margaret Laurence
    University of Windsor Scholarship at UWindsor Electronic Theses and Dissertations Theses, Dissertations, and Major Papers 1-1-1987 The men of Manawaka: An entrance to the works of Margaret Laurence. Shawn Everet Hayes University of Windsor Follow this and additional works at: https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/etd Recommended Citation Hayes, Shawn Everet, "The men of Manawaka: An entrance to the works of Margaret Laurence." (1987). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 6813. https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/etd/6813 This online database contains the full-text of PhD dissertations and Masters’ theses of University of Windsor students from 1954 forward. These documents are made available for personal study and research purposes only, in accordance with the Canadian Copyright Act and the Creative Commons license—CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution, Non-Commercial, No Derivative Works). Under this license, works must always be attributed to the copyright holder (original author), cannot be used for any commercial purposes, and may not be altered. Any other use would require the permission of the copyright holder. Students may inquire about withdrawing their dissertation and/or thesis from this database. For additional inquiries, please contact the repository administrator via email ([email protected]) or by telephone at 519-253-3000ext. 3208. THE MEN OF MANAWAKA AN ENTRANCE TO THE WORKS OF MARGARET LAURENCE by Shawn Everet Hayes A Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies through the Department of English in Partial Fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Masters of Arts at The University of Windsor Windsor, Ontario, Canada 1987 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner.
    [Show full text]
  • Clara Thomas Archives and Special Collections (CTASC)
    CLARA THOMAS ARCHIVES Inventory of the Ramsay Cook fonds Inventory #F0293 The digitization of this finding aid was made possible - in part or entirely - through the Canadian Culture Online Program of Canadian Heritage, the National Archives of Canada and the Canadian Council of Archives. page 2 F0293 - Ramsay Cook fonds Fonds/Collection Number: F0293 Title: Ramsay Cook fonds Dates: 1952-2011 Extent: 10.5 m of textual records 12 reels of microfilm 10 photographs Biographical Sketch/ George Ramsay Cook (1931-2016), educator and author, was born in Alameda, Administrative History: Saskatchewan to a United Church minister and his wife. He earned his BA at the University of Manitoba (1954), his MA at Queen's University (1956), and his PhD at the University of Toronto (1960) with a dissertation on John W. Dafoe. Cook joined the History Department at York University in 1969 following ten years as a member of the History Department of the University of Toronto. He was a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, an Officer of the Order of Canada, and received the Governor General's Award for non-fiction in 1985. Among numerous other awards and recognition, in 2005 Cook was the recipient of the Molson Prize in the Social Sciences & Humanities. Cook authored several studies in the field of Canadian history including "The politics of John W. Dafoe and the Free press" (1963), "Canada and the French Canadian question" (1966), "The Maple leaf forever" (1971), "Canada 1896-1921: a nation transformed", with R.C. Brown, (1975), "The regenerators: social criticism in late Victorian Canada" (1985), "Canada, Quebec and the uses of nationalism" (1986), and several other books, articles and studies.
    [Show full text]
  • Conference Program, 6-8 June 2019 Toronto
    Figure 1 Old Knox College at 1 Spadina Circle, n.d. University of Toronto Archives. University of Toronto. Department of Extension and Publicity, A1965-0004/026 [80.4]/ DIN: 2008-44-IMS Archival Origins 6-8 June 2019 Toronto Chelsea Hotel We acknowledge the land we are meeting on is the traditional territory of many nations including the Mississaugas of the Credit, the Anishnabeg, the Chippewa, the Haudenosaunee and the Wendat peoples and is now home to many diverse First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples. We also acknowledge that Toronto is covered by Treaty 13 with the Mississaugas of the Credit. http://mncfn.ca/torontopurchase/ http://mncfn.ca/media-communications/treaty-lands-and-territory-recognition- statements/ Treaties, Surrenders and Purchases: LAC link Table of Contents Welcome to ACA 2019 ...................................................................................................................................................... 7 President, Association of Canadian Archivists ............................................................................................................. 7 Mayor John Tory ........................................................................................................................................................... 8 Program Team ........................................................................................................................................................... 10 ACA 2019 Host Team Chair ........................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Gender and the Canadian Jewish Fur Trader Experience: Expansion and Colonialism in British North America – 1759 to 1812
    Gender and the Canadian Jewish Fur Trader Experience: Expansion and Colonialism in British North America – 1759 to 1812 Emily Belmonte Professor David Koffman 23 March 2021 HIST 4581 Belmonte 1 Reflecting on the early history of Jews in Manitoba with both wonder and praise, Rabbi Arthur A. Chiel declared, “Jews have penetrated into many lands of the globe… it is little wonder, then, that when the seemingly boundless regions of the New World became known to European man, Jews too made their way across the Atlantic to try their fortunes.”1 Chiel was right that in the mid-eighteenth century young Jewish men were among the European opportunists who came to North America with the dream of expanding economic profit. As historians Sheldon and Judy Godfrey have written about eighteenth-century Jewish migrants, these Jewish settler men were enticed to travel to North America due to the restrictions placed on their civil and political liberties in England.2 Simply put, migrant Jewish men were motivated to seek out places which would afford them equal opportunities as self-identified Jews, establish Jewish communities, and expand their economic prospects. In the case of the early Canadian Jewish experience, this desire to achieve economic prosperity was principally achieved through the fur trade. In the mid-seventeenth century, notes historian Ira Robinson, the fur trade was the most lucrative economic activity in New France, due to the large availability of fur-bearing animals, making the lands extremely desirable for colonists like the British.3 As a result, the climate that Jewish men entered into in North America during the 1760’s was one of intense struggle and tension between the British and French over the colony, resulting in the Seven Year’s War (1756–1763), which ended with British triumph and the collapse of New France.4 Early Jewish settlement to this area directly commenced following Britain’s acquisition of British North America in 1763 upon the signing of the Treaty 1 Rabbi Arthur A.
    [Show full text]
  • Conference Program Page June 1 – 4, 2011 Toronto, Ontario
    June 1 – 4, 2011 Toronto, Ontario Toronto, Ontario 36th Annual Conference 1 - 4 June, 2011 Back to Basics?! Final Version 2011 Conference Program Page June 1 – 4, 2011 Toronto, Ontario Walerstein's Ice Cream Parlour, ca. 1922, Ontario Jewish Archives, (photo #2533) Credit: ONTARIO JEWISH ARCHIVES Table of Contents: Welcome Letters President, Association of Canadian Archivists .............................................. 3 Prime Minister ............................................................................................. 4 Premier of Ontario ....................................................................................... 5 Committee Messages.................................................................................... 6 Our Sponsors & Exhibitors........................................................................... 7 Session Descriptions ........................................................................................... 8 Thursday, June 2.......................................................................................... 8 Friday, June 3............................................................................................. 14 Saturday, June 4......................................................................................... 20 Social Events.................................................................................................... 24 Pre - Conference Workshops............................................................................. 26 Conference Organisers.....................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2014–2015 Art Gallery of York University
    Annual Report 2014–2015 Art Gallery of York University “Amazing exhibition—wonderful resource for my class (MGD Studio). How lucky we are to have this right at York!” — York Professor “Such a welcome respite to enjoy the art in the middle of a busy day. Thank you for sharing it.” — York staff member “J’ai trouvé vos tableaux très beaux. Je reviendrai probablement une prochaine fois, avec plaisir !” “THAT WAS INCREDIBLE.” “So hip, very interesting and fun!” In conjunction with the Parapan Am Games, the AGYU commissioned and organized Ring of Fire, a 300-person procession from Queen’s Park to Nathan Phillip’s Square. The AGYU won an unprecedented seven Ontario Association of Art Galleries Awards. The AGYU was a finalist for Premier’s Awards for Excellence in the Arts. Creative Campaigning, with Los Angeles artist Heather Cassils, engaged students from Fundamentals of Social Work and the Department of Visual Art and Art History Printmaking in a multivalent, multi-part program that culminated in a participatory performance by fifty students viewed by hundreds on the Ross podium. The AGYU partnered with the School of the Arts, Media, Performance, and Design in the Louis Odette Sculptor-in-Residence program. The AGYU’s outreach extended throughout the whole GTA from Jane-Finch to include Malvern and Regent Park and downtown, with public presentations, 200 workshops with community arts organizations such as Malvern S.P.O.T., Art Starts, and Sketch. • 24 Canadian artists exhibited, with 110 works created specifically for the AGYU • 40 Community Art Projects, with over 800 participants and 1,850 attendees • Over 2,600 public participants in artist-in-residence projects Exhibitions Is Toronto Burning? : 1977|1978|1979: Three Years in the Making (and Unmaking) of the Toronto Art Scene The late 1970s was a key period when the To- ronto art scene was in formation and destruc- 17 September – 7 December 2014 tion—downtown, that is.
    [Show full text]
  • Centre for Newfoundland Studies May Be Xeroxed
    CENTRE FOR NEWFOUNDLAND STUDIES TOTAL OF 10 PAGES ONLY MAY BE XEROXED (Without Author's Permission) IMMIGRANT NATIONS, POSTIMMIGRANT SUBJECTIVITIES: LOCATING THE IMMIGRANT IN THE AGE OF GLOBALIZATION by © Batia Boe Stolar A thesis submitted to the School of Graduate Studies in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of English Language & Literature Memorial University of Newfoundland September 2003 St. John's Newfoundland Table of Contents Abstract Acknowledgments ..... .. ... .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... 111 Dedication ........................................ ................................... .................... ........... .......... 1v Introduction 1 Chapter 1 Definitions . .. .. ... .. .. ... ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... ... .. ...... .. .. .. .. .. .. 24 1.1 Defining the Immigrant: Semantic Analysis . .. .. .. ... .. 24 1.2 The Immigrant versus the Native ................................................... 33 1.3 Redefining the Nation: the Immigrant Nation ............................. 45 1.4 The Immigrant and the Immigrant Nation..................................... 52 Chapter 2 Immigrant Nations ................................................................................ 57 Part I 2.1 American Immigration: A Historical Overview ... ... .. ................... 60 2.2 The "Old Immigration" versus the "New Immigration" .............. 68 2.3 Multiplicity in Anzia Yezierska's Bread Givers ............................ 75 2.4 The Politics of Assimilation ..........................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Canadian Women Writers Stories by Canadian
    ety of birds not of their species, they period. The pattern offhomas's criti- her a model to emerging feminist choose "the notes and cadences that, cism is descriptive and chronologi- scholars. Most ofall, whenThomas is combined with their own attempts, cal-a reminder of the text under writing as an archivist, we glimpse completed their species song." scrutiny, then an assessment and ap- her friendship with Margaret preciation, making these essays acces- Laurence in quotations shared from sible in the positive sense by their letters, and learn much about contextualizingwith her strong sense the writing process Laurence devel- of cultural history. Hers is a literary- oped towards the end of her oeuvre. historical approach, sometimes even Readers accustomed to a diet of a sociological one (apt because some critical theory readings may be impa- ALL MY SISTERS: ESSAYS writers, like Sara Jeannette Duncan, tient with linear commentaries, with ON THE WORK OF are so keenly interested in social types notes on a book's publishing history CANADIAN WOMEN themselves), and a biographical one, and an author's popularity in her day, WRITERS as befits a biographer ofAnna Jameson or with the moral undertaking which and William Arthur Deacon; the sub- Thomas elucidates in the religious title might have reflected the fact that and spiritual convictions oflaurence, Clara Thomas. Ottawa: The most essays are equally on the lives as Frye and others. But Thomas is a Tecumseh Press Limited, 1994. well as the work of the Canadian senior scholar who can continue writ- women writers under discussion. ing what she wants to write without by SyZvia M.
    [Show full text]
  • 2019 Congress Program
    Registration information: The registration desk (and conference catering) will be located in the lobby of Accolade West (#93 on the map), a short walk from the York University Subway Station. Most panels will be held in Accolade West. The registration desk will be open during the following hours: Friday May 10: 8:30 am—3:00 pm Saturday May 11: 8:30 am—4:00 pm Sunday May 12: 9:00 am—3:00 pm Wi-Fi: If you are from a participating institution, an eduroam network is available. Alternatively, you can use the AirYorkGUEST network. Cover photos of 1970 Caribana parade in Toronto by David Davies, courtesy of Clara Thomas Archives and Special Collections, York University Land Acknowledgment York University acknowledges its presence on the traditional territory of many Indigenous Nations. The area known as Tkaronto has been care-taken by the a-nish-na-bek Nation, the ho- dee-no-sho-nee Confederacy, the Huron-Wendat, and the Métis. It is now home to many Indigenous Peoples. We acknowledge the current treaty holders, the Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation. This territory is subject to the Dish With One Spoon Wampum Belt Covenant, an agreement to peaceably share and care for the Great Lakes region. L’Université York reconnaît sa présence sur le territoire traditionnel de nombreuses nations autochtones. La région connue comme Tkaronto a été préservée par la nation anishinabek, la Confédération Haudenosaunee, les Hurons-Wendats et les Métis. Elle est désormais le foyer d’un grand nombre de peuples autochtones. Nous reconnaissons les titulaires actuels du traité, la première Nation des Mississaugas de New Credit.
    [Show full text]
  • Clara Thomas Archives and Special Collections (CTASC)
    CLARA THOMAS ARCHIVES Inventory of the Jeanne Randolph fonds Inventory #F0585 The digitization of this finding aid was made possible - in part or entirely - through the Canadian Culture Online Program of Canadian Heritage, the National Archives of Canada and the Canadian Council of Archives. page 2 F0585 - Jeanne Randolph fonds Fonds/Collection Number: F0585 Title: Jeanne Randolph fonds Dates: [189-?]-2010 Extent: 7.95 m of textual records 4,242 photographs : b&w, col. and sepia ; 24 x 37 cm or smaller 1,927 photographs : b&w and col. negatives ; 35 mm 214 photographs : col. slides ; 35 mm 145 photographs (jpeg and tiff) 16 posters 10 CDs 6 DVDs 6 videocassettes 4 computer disks 2 audio cassettes 1 painting Biographical Sketch/ Jeanne Lillian Randolph (1943- ), art theorist, writer and psychiatrist, was born in Administrative History: Morgantown, West Virginia, and grew up in Orange, Texas. She was educated at the Agnes College for Women in Decatur, Georgia (1961-1962) and attained a Bachelor of Arts in English language and literature from the University of Chicago in 1965. Randolph attended medical school at Columbia University in New York City (1966-1968) and at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles (1968-1970). An opponent of the Vietnam War, Randolph became a Canadian permanent resident in September 1970 and resumed her medical studies at University of Toronto, graduating in 1974. As a resident in psychiatry between 1975 and 1980, Randolph worked at the Clarke Institute of Psychiatry, Sunnybrook Hospital and Toronto General Hospital. After completion of her residency in 1980, Randolph was an associate staff psychiatrist in the Department of Psychiatry at Toronto General Hospital and lectured at the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto.
    [Show full text]