What is it about?

Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) Libraries Special Collections and Archives has focused its manuscript collecting around women's collections since the department's inception in 1975. By happenstance, VCU's predecessor institutions, the Medical College of Virginia (1838) and the Richmond Professional Institute (1917), had accumulated research materials through their traditionally female-oriented courses of study, such as nursing and social work. Capitalizing on the rising popularity of women's history and the subject strengths found in its institutional archives, VCU began acquiring the papers of local women and the records of historically female organizations during the late 1970s and 1980s. This collection focus aligned with the urban, community-centered mission of the university and set VCU apart from other libraries and cultural institutions in central Virginia. The collecting area was expanded a decade later to include voices that were missing from the materials. Today, the collections are broad based and intersectional with wide-ranging representations of women.

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Why is it important?

This article provided an opportunity for reflection on how the women-focused collections grew and opened the way for adding materials from marginalized groups to expand the voices represented in the archives while supporting the academic needs of the university. It also helps inform the future of collecting in these areas.

Perspectives

This article gave me and my coauthors the opportunity to dig into the department's history and learn how we came to collect the materials that we do. It was a mix of serendipity and planning. I think that this is likely a shared experience for many archives.

Margaret Kidd
Virginia Commonwealth University

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: “We Are Not Bound by Traditions”: Women's Collections at Virginia Commonwealth University Special Collections and Archives, Collections A Journal for Museum and Archives Professionals, September 2018, SAGE Publications,
DOI: 10.1177/155019061801400306.
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