American Folklife Center
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American Folklife Center | |
---|---|
Location | Washington, D.C., United States |
Type | Research center |
Scope | To preserve and present American Folklife |
Established | 1976 |
Collection | |
Items collected | All aspects of folklore and folklife worldwide |
Size | 6 million |
Other information | |
Parent organization | Library of Congress |
Website | www |
The American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. was created by Congress in 1976 "to preserve and present American Folklife".[1] The center includes the Archive of Folk Culture, established at the library in 1928 as a repository for American folk music. The center and its collections have grown to encompass all aspects of folklore and folklife worldwide.
Collections
The 20th century has been called the age of documentation. Folklorists and other
The center's archive has about 6 million items, 400,000 of which are sound recordings.[2][3]
The center's collections include
The images, sounds, written accounts, moving image recordings, and more items of cultural documentation are available to researchers at the center's Archive of Folk Culture and through online presentations on the Library's web site. There, more than 4,000 collections, assembled over the years from "many workers", embody American traditional life and the cultural life of communities from many regions of the world. Collections in the archive include material from all 50 states, United States trusts, territories and the
See also
- Gordon "Inferno" Collection
- StoryCorps, an American Folklife Center Special Project
- Veterans History Project of the Library of Congress American Folklife Center, an American Folklife Center Special Project[4]
References
- ^ "The Creation of the American Folklife Center". Public Law 94-201 No. 94th Congress, H.R. 6673 of January 2, 1976. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
- ^ Stephen Winick and Peter Bartis, with contribution by Nancy Groce, Margaret Kruesi, and Guha Shankar. Folklife and Fieldwork: an introduction cultural documentation, fourth edition. Library of Congress. 2016. page 1.
- ^ American Folklife Center, Official web site
- ^ "About the Veterans History Project (American Folklife Center)". www.loc.gov. Retrieved 2021-12-23.
Further reading
- Hickerson, Joseph C. Radio-Related Field Recordings and Broadcasts Involving Archive Archive of Folk Culture Collections, Personnel, and Radio Projects: Recordings in the Archive of Folk Culture through 1986, in series, LCFAFA [i.e., Library of Congress Folk Archives Finding Aids], no. 6. Compiled by Joseph C. Hickerson, with the assistance of Eric S. Haag ... [et al.]. Washington, D.C.: Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, 1990.