Archival material

Taxonomy

Code

Scope note(s)

Source note(s)

Display note(s)

Hierarchical terms

Archival material

Equivalent terms

Archival material

Associated terms

Archival material

2518 Collection description results for Archival material

2518 results directly related Exclude narrower terms

Non-family photographs

LSE Archives reference: LANSBURY/26 Part 4
The first digital file in the Part 4 contains all the images bundled up in a pdf file. Subsequent files are individual images, front and back, in jpg file format.

  1. George Barker, 1933.
  2. Samuel Augustus Barnett, undated.
  3. Vladimir D. Bonch-Bruevich, c1920.
  4. W. Dingwall, 1927.
  5. Sir George Edwards, undated.
  6. James Keir Hardie, undated.
  7. Reverend John Fenwick Kitto,1880.
  8. Hermann Molkenbuhr, undated.
  9. Montagu Samuel Montagu, undated.
  10. Rita Ricardo, 1934.
  11. Mr Tarling, 1875.
  12. Sidney Webb, 1924.
  13. Bow Church, undated.
  14. Socialist Literature Depot, Hastings 1910.
  15. National Union of Clerks, Leeds conference, undated.
  16. Group at Women's Labour League conference, including Margaret Bondfield, Portsmouth, January 1909

Nkapile Hlakola, composer singer of Dipalela Tlala, in performance with her group (Sephaku)

Personal author: James, Deborah
Personal author: Mofokeng, Santu
From the Series: Songs of the women migrants [Archive catalogue reference: LSE ANTHROPOLOGY PHOTOS/JAMES/2].
Photographs taken in Sekhukhuneland, Nebo and Johannesburg by Santu Mofokeng and Deborah James for her' book "Songs of the Women Migrants: Performance and Identity in South Africa" 1999, Edinburgh University Press.

Nina Millns interviewed by Nicky Arikoglu

This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording.
At the time of the interview, Nina was a writer, actor and activist. She attended a nursery established by Greenham Women. Operating through a non-hierarchical and collective decision-making process they, some as openly gay and bi-sexual women, encouraged the children to explore their identities, something Nina believes was a direct result of their own Greenham experiences. Nina believes Greenhamas legacy is that of an activism that bypasses and lies outside established systems of power and norms of protest so as to raise awareness of issues and move them forward. She feels Greenham's legacy has made it second nature for her to raise such awareness, to effect change on particular issues, and never to feel helpless in the face of existing power structures.
Nina was interviewed by Nicky Arikoglu in 2019.

Nikos Koushaii

Personal author: Loizos, Peter
From the Series: Argaki, Cyprus [Archive catalogue reference: LSE ANTHROPOLOGY PHOTOS/LOIZOS/1].
Photographs taken during fieldwork in Cyprus. These photographs first appeared in 'Grace in Exile' 2003 and Professor Loizos gratefully acknowledges the permission of Moufflon Publications (Nicosia) and the proprietor, Ruth Keshishian to reproduce them.

Results 1065 to 1092 of 2518