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Susan Waltz papers, 1979-2013 [Bulk 1993-1999]
14 Linear FeetThis collection of papers documents the work of Amnesty International's IEC, IEC Standing Committees, International Council Meetings, materials related to international planning and finances, and papers concerning AI policies and country priorities. Thematic areas of focus include research coverage in AI, crisis response (including Rwanda), impunity and the International Criminal Court, and economic, social and cultural rights.
Multilingualism
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- Multilingualism
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Refers to AI's policy discussions regarding in-house interpretation and translation of AI materials
Amnesty International of the USA Inc : National Office records, 1966-2003, bulk 1974-1993
267.52 linear feetMultilingualism, 1990-1991 Box i.4 9, Folder 14
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- Multilingualism, 1990-1991
Lydia Davis papers, 1940-2022
61 Linear FeetTranslation--Multilingual Product Literature Box 87, Folder 2
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- Translation--Multilingual Product Literature
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Product information in English and in French
Jack Agüeros papers, 1914-2012, bulk 1961-2012
22 linear feetRavitch Program for a Multilingual City, 1989 Box 3, Folder 11
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- Ravitch Program for a Multilingual City, 1989
Language and Culture Archive of Ashkenazic Jewry, 1949-1997
129 linear feet"Multilingual Dialectology & the New Yiddish Atlas", 1961 Box 234, Folder 6
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- "Multilingual Dialectology & the New Yiddish Atlas", 1961
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U. Weinreich; AAA Philadelphia Nov 18th 1961; letters; conference program; typescript; maps
U. Weinreich: Multilingual Dialectology and the New Yiddish Atlas, 1962 Box 233, Folder 20
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- U. Weinreich: Multilingual Dialectology and the New Yiddish Atlas, 1962
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Print copy
Zosa Szajkowski Collection, 1900s-1947
6 linear feetAmsterdam Movement, [1932] Box 1, Folder 10
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- (multilingual pamphlet and subscription list)
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(multilingual pamphlet and subscription list)
Marvin I. Herzog papers, 1942-2008
5.67 linear feetThe Marvin Herzog collection contains correspondence relating to Herzog's academic and personal life, including printouts from an email list devoted to Yiddish Studies. Also included is teaching and research materials, as well as materials relating to Herzog's work on the Language and Culture Atlas of Ashkenazic Jewry (LCAAJ), and various materials relating to Zionist summer camps.
MAST application, 2000 Box 7, Folder 9
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- NSF application "MAST (Multilingual Access to Spoken Text): Creating a Digital Library of the
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NSF application "MAST (Multilingual Access to Spoken Text): Creating a Digital Library of the Modern Yiddish Language and letters of support; letter from Judith Klavans to MH
Institute for Research on Women, Gender, and Sexuality Oral History Collection, 2014-2015
35 VolumesKaren Van Dyck, 2015 February 11 Box 3
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- the role of multilingualism in Greek Diaspora literature. Van Dyck received her BA from Wesleyan
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In this interview, Karen Van Dyck begins by discussing her early life and education. She particularly focuses on her first trip to Greece, which inspired her intellectual pursuit of modern Greek female poets. In 1988, Van Dyck was recruited to begin a Modern Greek program at Columbia University and immediately became involved with IRWGS, both teaching and learning within the institute. She discusses the support network she found at IRWGS, particularly after the birth of her three children. All the while, Van Dyck explains, she was working to open up the Classics department to changes, including its collaboration with IRWGS. This was supported by the department chair Roger Bagnall but, Van Dyck notes, she was the Classics faculty member who was primarily relied upon to do this bridge work. Van Dyck discusses this experience and the nature of this work. Throughout the interview, Van Dyck discusses the differences in studying women and feminism at different institutions, particularly Columbia, Wesleyan, and Oxford. Additionally, Van Dyck ruminates over her generation's place, especially the place of female scholars, within larger institutional history and over the shifts and realignments of IRWGS in recent years. Van Dyck discusses the institute's growing emphasis on the social sciences. She discusses collaboration with the Institute as well as the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society.