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Start Over You searched for: Creator Indiana University, Bloomington. Folklore Institute Remove constraint Creator: Indiana University, Bloomington. Folklore Institute Level Collection Remove constraint Level: Collection Year 2000 to 2001 Remove constraint Year: <span class="from" data-blrl-begin="2000">2000</span> to <span class="to" data-blrl-end="2001">2001</span>

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Indiana University Folklore Institute's Auburn, Cord, Duesenberg Project records, 1979-2004, bulk 1981-1983

.8 cubic foot (3 boxes) Collection ID: C588
The Auburn, Cord, Duesenberg Project was a documentary production undertaken by Indiana University's Folklore Institute and Radio and Television Services between 1981 and 1983. The grant-funded project allowed a team of folklorists and film crews to attend the Auburn, Cord, Duesenberg Festival, a long-running celebration of classic cars and automotive heritage in Auburn, Indiana, 23 miles north of Fort Wayne. The collection consists of materials that trace the evolution of the Auburn, Cord, Duesenberg Project from planning to debriefing and includes project participants' activities researching and filming the Auburn, Cord, Duesenberg festival.

Indiana University Folklore Institute student papers, 1967-2016 and undated

60 cubic feet (60 rc) Collection ID: C627
The Indiana University Folklore Institute is an active center of folklore scholarship and has a long history of collecting oral literature and arts. This collection consists of papers written on a variety of topics by students taking courses in the Folklore Institute. These papers are dated roughly between 1967 through the early 2010s.

Journal of Folklore Research records, 1934-2006, bulk 1972-2006

6.2 cubic feet (7 boxes) Collection ID: C57
Originally published as the Journal of the Folklore Institute in 1964 by the Folklore Institute, the Journal of Folklore Research was established in 1982 to incorporate more international and expansive coverage. The goal of the journal is to link similar social sciences such as anthropology, communication, history, linguistics, literature, oral history, psychology and sociology. The collection consists of administrative files, including various advertisements, correspondence, editorial board meeting papers, as well as accepted and rejected articles which were retained to document the selection and edit processes. There are also miscellaneous copies of JFR and some other printed materials.