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Box 116

 Container

Contains 24 Results:

"Michigan: Whosestory", 1985

 File — Box: 116, Folder: 23
Scope and Contents From the Collection:

William G. Lockwood collection of Romani Ethnology and Gypsy stereotypes contains several thousand books and periodicals, numerous visual depictions, over a thousand sound recordings, and several hundred examples of sheet music exploring the representation of Romani and Gypsy stereotypes. The William G. Lockwood Collection of Romani Ethnology and Gypsy Stereotypes is as geographically diverse as the Roma themselves, with publications from Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas.

Dates: 1985

"Festival of Michigan Folklife", 1988-1996, 1998

 File — Box: 116, Folder: 24-32, 34
Scope and Contents From the Series:

Materials, including speech notes, maps and itineraries, from the annual folk festivals put on by the Michigan State University Museum. William Lockwood presented speeches on his various enthographic studies every year from 1988-2005 at the festival. The annual folk festival went by several different names throughout the years, including the Great Lakes Folk Festival, the National Folk Festival, and the Festival of Michigan Folklife.

Dates: 1988-1996, 1998

"Car Culture/ Workers Culture", 1997

 File — Box: 116, Folder: 33
Scope and Contents From the Collection:

William G. Lockwood collection of Romani Ethnology and Gypsy stereotypes contains several thousand books and periodicals, numerous visual depictions, over a thousand sound recordings, and several hundred examples of sheet music exploring the representation of Romani and Gypsy stereotypes. The William G. Lockwood Collection of Romani Ethnology and Gypsy Stereotypes is as geographically diverse as the Roma themselves, with publications from Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas.

Dates: 1997

The National Folk Festival, 1999

 File — Box: 116, Folder: 35
Scope and Contents From the Series:

Materials, including speech notes, maps and itineraries, from the annual folk festivals put on by the Michigan State University Museum. William Lockwood presented speeches on his various enthographic studies every year from 1988-2005 at the festival. The annual folk festival went by several different names throughout the years, including the Great Lakes Folk Festival, the National Folk Festival, and the Festival of Michigan Folklife.

Dates: 1999