Life on the Homefront: A Collection of WWII Images from the San Francisco Examiner

May 19 – August 15, 2011
Display Cases, Corridor between the Doe and Bancroft Libraries
Open during the operating hours of The Doe Library

This exhibit results from The Bancroft Library’s efforts to preserve the 3.6 million negatives of the Fang Family San Francisco Examiner Photograph Archive. It presents photographs, reproduced from original negatives, documenting war efforts in the San Francisco Bay Area. Themes include civilian defense, rationing & salvage, women in uniform, supporting the troops, women in industry, and bond drives.

In 2006 The Bancroft Library received the San Francisco Examiner Photograph Archive from the Fang family and the Anschutz Corporation. It is a priceless visual record of the Bay Area throughout the 20th century and is the largest single gift of visual materials to the library. Its receipt more than doubled Bancroft’s photographic holdings. Since receiving the archive, staff have been working to stabilize and preserve this irreplaceable historical record. All 3.6 million negatives have now been re-housed and placed in a cold vault maintained at 40 degrees Fahrenheit. Work has been supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Save America’s Treasures grant program, and now continues with support from the Council on Library and Information Resources.


King James Bible Turns 400

Exhibit case located in the Reference Room of The Bancroft Library.
Viewable during the open hours of the Bancroft Reading Room.

The year 2011 marks the 400 year anniversary of the King James Bible, considered one of the most influential of all English versions.

On display is the first edition, printed in 1611. Of the two versions, The Bancroft Library owns what is known as the Great “He” Bible which contains a textual error in Ruth 3:15. In later printings of the first edition, the error was corrected.


A Centennial Celebration: California Women and the Vote

August 22 – December 16, 2011
Bancroft Display Cases
(2nd floor corridor between the Doe and Bancroft Libraries)

Open during the operating hours of The Doe Library

On October 10, 1911, a special election was held in California. Appearing on the ballot was Proposition 4, a measure that would grant women the right to vote within the Golden State. The final tally was 125,037 to 121,450, giving woman suffrage a narrow victory of just 3,587 votes.

With material drawn from collections held in The Bancroft Library, this exhibit celebrates the centennial anniversary of woman suffrage in California. Brought to light are the faces of the state’s suffragists, many from the Bay Area, along with those of the movement’s support and opposition. This exhibit also illustrates the suffragists’ vigorous campaign to rally votes for their cause, as well as the media frenzy to predict the election’s final outcome.


Bullets Across the Bay: The San Francisco Bay Area in Crime Fiction

September 8, 2011 – February 29, 2012
Bernice Layne Brown Gallery, The Doe Library
Open during the operating hours of The Doe Library

Ever since the publication of Dashiell Hammett’s The Maltese Falcon in 1930, San Francisco has been recognized as the birthplace of modern crime fiction. Using materials from numerous campus libraries, “Bullets Across the Bay” examines the Bay Area as a popular setting for mystery and detective novels and highlights the richness of UC Berkeley’s collections for the study of genre fiction.

 


California Crossings: Stories of Migration, Relocation, and New Encounters

September 20, 2011 – January 6, 2012
The Bancroft Library Gallery
Open from 10am – 4pm

The exhibition invites the viewer to embrace the rich and diverse history of the state through The Bancroft Library’s unique and rare holdings and makes manifest the many stories that interweave the broader history of what is today collectively known as California. Selected from Bancroft’s voluminous collections, the original manuscripts, drawings, paintings, photographs, rare publications and prints highlight the often contradictory and competing claims to history from the points of view of the original peoples and the national interests that set in motion California’s coming of age.


Women at Cal, 1910-1915: When California Passed the Woman Suffrage Amendment

October 7, 2011 – March 30, 2012
The Bancroft Library Rowell Cases
Open during the operating hours of The Doe Library

In October 1911 California became the sixth state to embrace equal suffrage for women, one of the signal reforms of the Progressive Era. Meanwhile, women in the university were pursuing their academic careers with vigor – and glaring inequality. Although women students had been admitted on an equal basis since 1870, their access to the university’s intellectual, social, recreational, and athletic resources was restricted in comparison with men. Drawn primarily from the University Archives’ collections, this exhibition examines the status of women on campus in this critical period.


Shakespeare’s First Folio, and other 17th century editions of his works

The Classic 17th Century Folio Editions of Shakespeare’s Works

March – May 14th 2012
The Bancroft Library Reading Room Exhibit Cases
Open during the operating hours of the Bancroft Reading Room

On display are the First, Second, Third, and Fourth Folios of Shakespeare’s works along with a rare quarto edition of The Two Noble Kinsmen.

The First Folio of 1623 is the crowning glory of any English literature collection. This first publication of Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies appeared seven years after the Bard’s death. It contains the first editions of twenty of his plays, including more accurate texts for eight plays which had been previously published. The Second Folio of 1632 is a close reprinting with a few incidental variants of the text of the First Folio. The Third Folio of 1663 is the rarest of the four folios, as an unknown number of the unsold copies were destroyed in the great fire of London in 1666. The text includes the first appearance of Pericles, the last play to be accepted into the Shakespeare canon. The Fourth Folio of 1685 is a reprint of the Third Folio and the last of the great folio editions published in the 17th century.

As a contrast to the four folios on display, it is fitting to include one quarto. Quartos are small pamphlets that were produced in haste and sold on the street for a few pence. Several of Shakespeare’s plays were first published in quarto editions, but since they were small and ordinary looking, they were not assiduously preserved and are now very scarce.


All Hail to the Chief

April 9 – December 1, 2012
The Bancroft Library Rowell Cases
Open during the operating hours of The Doe Library

Over the course of more than 120 years, Presidents of the United States — past, present, and future — have visited the University of California, Berkeley campus for commencements, Charter Day celebrations, and other notable campus occasions. From 1891 when Benjamin Harrison offered brief remarks from a carriage in front of South Hall, to 1962 when John F. Kennedy energized tens of thousands at California Memorial Stadium, Berkeley has welcomed these chief executives.

At least five sitting Presidents — Benjamin Harrison, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, Harry Truman, and John F. Kennedy spoke at the Berkeley campus during their presidential terms. Others — including William Howard Taft, Herbert Hoover, Franklin Roosevelt, Ronald Reagan, and Bill Clinton — visited Berkeley either before or after their term(s) in office. One president, William McKinley, was scheduled to visit, but had to cancel in the same day.

In the Presidential election year of 2012, we look back at these visits, the pomp and circumstance, politics and poignancy, of the occasions when the University of California played host to “Mr. President.” We also commemorate fifty years since the last official visit by a sitting President, John F. Kennedy in 1962.


A Place at the Table

April – July 2012
The Bancroft Library Gallery
Open 10am – 4pm, Monday through Friday

You have been invited to a grand party. Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas are your hosts. Gathered in one room are over 150 years of Americans embodying a rainbow of diversity who have one thing in common: a non-normative sexual orientation. Here you will encounter lesbians and bisexuals and gay men. You will find individuals who self-identify as transgender, queer, polyamorous, questioning — and none of the above. Here are the old and the young of many races and ethnicities. In text, image and voice these Americans have taken their unique and often difficult life experiences and have transmuted them into beautiful and fierce art. In 1919 a Crow Indian named Woman Jim explained life as a berdache in four words: “That is my road.” For the LGBT guests at this party — the poets and the novelists, the cartoonists and the classical composers, the drag queens and the blues singers, the starving artists and the superstars — this is their road.

Visit the companion online exhibit:
http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/omeka/exhibits/show/aplaceatthetable