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For Immediate Release
Alexander Street Press, American Antiquarian Society partner on
Manuscript Women's Letters and Diaries.
Alexander Street Press has
reached an agreement with the American Antiquarian Society to
digitize and publish thousands of manuscript letters and diaries
from the Society’s collections. The first product from this
partnership will be
Manuscript
Women’s Letters and Diaries from the American Antiquarian Society,
which is scheduled for release this fall. Providing immediate access
to content that has never been available in electronic form, the
project marks an important milestone for students and scholars of
American history. Plans for additional projects are underway.
“It’s a privilege to be
working with the American Antiquarian Society,” said Stephen
Rhind-Tutt, President of Alexander Street Press. “The breadth and
richness of the Society’s letter and diary holdings combined with
our expertise in creating carefully indexed searchable databases
will open new avenues of research that will deepen the scholarly
understanding of everyday life in America from Colonial times to the
mid-twentieth century.”
Spanning 1750 to 1950, Manuscript
Women’s Letters and Diaries from the American Antiquarian Society
will bring together 100,000 pages of
correspondence and papers by such notable women as Ellen Tucker
Emerson, eldest daughter of Ralph Waldo Emerson, who describes life
in Concord during the Civil War, and Abby Kelley Foster, noted
women’s rights advocate and abolitionist, who depicts the activities
of the antislavery movement in New England, New York, and Ohio.
Thousands of letters and diary entries from less well known women
vividly document even the smallest details of their lives and shed
light on the roles women played within their families, their
communities, and the social and political movements of their times.
Each letter and diary entry will
be indexed using Alexander Street’s Semantic Indexing™,
allowing researchers to identify and locate content with pinpoint
accuracy. The letters and diaries will be displayed as images of the
manuscripts, giving users access not only to the women’s words, but
also to details revealed by the physical documents themselves.
Ellen S. Dunlap, President of
the American Antiquarian Society, noted, “We are especially pleased
to be partnering with Alexander Street, as we believe that the
innovative technology they have developed is particularly
well-suited to our goal of preserving the manuscripts in our care
while making them accessible to a much broader audience.”
Founded in 1812 and located in
Worcester, Massachusetts, the American Antiquarian Society is
both a noted research library of early American history and a
learned society that sponsors a broad range of activities, including
visiting research fellowships, research and teacher enrichment
programs, scholarly publications, and public lectures and concerts.
Its collections of books, pamphlets, newspapers, periodicals,
ephemera, and graphics document American history and culture and are
widely recognized as the most comprehensive in the nation.
Alexander Street Press, L.L.C.,
is an academic publisher of electronic online databases, including
collections in music, history, literature, women’s studies, black
studies, sociology, psychology, ethnic and diversity studies,
religion, social theory, popular culture, film studies, the arts,
and other areas. Alexander Street databases have won numerous
awards, and the company is known for its unique and powerful
organizing and indexing methods. Alexander Street Press is located
in Alexandria, Virginia.
For
additional information about
Manuscript
Women’s Letters and Diaries from the American Antiquarian Society,
please contact Eileen Lawrence, vice president of sales and
marketing, 800-889-5937 ext. 211 or
lawrence@alexanderstreet.com. Or visit
http://alexanderstreet.com.

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