CalRBS 2024 Lecture: Tamar Evangelestia-Dougherty
PUBLIC LECTURE & RECEPTION
Wednesday, August 14, 2024 5:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m.
University of California, Los Angeles
5:30–6:30 p.m. talk in Royce Hall 314
6:30–8:30 p.m. reception in Luskin Conference Center North Patio (outdoors)
event flyer
An Illuminated Perspective On Why Everybody Knows My Name: Rare Book Schooling While Black! Mediated Inclusion, Contested Belonging and Why Black Bibliography Really Matters
Rare Book School programs offer the opportunity for comprehensive study to advance scholarly engagement and enlightenment on topics related to the world of rare books, archives and manuscripts and their historical position in society. Prompted by the wake of the Black Lives Matter Protests, rare book professional development programs shifted from traditional landscapes of rare and distinctive collections course offerings to adopt topics and instructors who more holistically prioritize equity and empowerment through special collections advocacy and social justice.. However despite such efforts, the historical cannon of black bibliophiles remains cemented in time. Additionally, the active participation of BIPOC library and archives professionals in rare book school programs remains low.
Working within the framework of her lived personal experiences as a student at the Rare Book School at University of Virginia and a faculty member of California Rare Book School, Tamar Evangelestia-Dougherty, will share a diary of her impressions navigating the landscape of rare books and special collections as a woman of color. Drawing upon her story as a point of reference across the continuum of past, present and future rare book school inclusion initiatives, she will offer ways rare book schools can intensify efforts to promote extended spaces of engagement and belonging for diverse communities.
Tamar Evangelestia-Dougherty
is the director of the Smithsonian Libraries and Archives. The recently integrated Smithsonian Libraries and Archives contains nearly 3 million library volumes and over 44,000 cubic feet of archival materials chronicling the history of the Smithsonian. Evangelestia-Dougherty oversees 137 employees, a national advisory board of 15 members, an annual budget of over $16 million and 22 library branches and reading rooms located in Washington, D.C., New York City, Maryland, Virginia and the Republic of Panama.
Previously, Evangelestia-Dougherty was an associate university librarian at Cornell University where she initiated Cornell RAD, a new research hub for rare and distinctive collections. She is also a faculty member of the UCLA California Rare Book School. As director of collections and services at New York Public Library’s Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture from 2013 to 2014, Evangelestia-Dougherty led collection and programmatic development of five curatorial divisions. At the University of Chicago’s Black Metropolis Research Consortium, she served as executive director from 2011 to 2013 and as consulting archivist from 2007 to 2011. There, she successfully led initiatives to discover and make accessible archives related to the African American diaspora.
In addition to her extensive work with rare and distinctive collections, Evangelestia-Dougherty is a published author and public speaker who has presented nationally on topics of inclusivity and equity in bibliography, administration and primary-source literacy. She currently serves on the boards of Digital Scriptorium and the American Printing History Association.
Evangelestia-Dougherty holds a Master of Science in information science from Simmons University’s School of Library and Information Science in Boston and a bachelor’s degree in political science from the University of Houston.
Evangelestia-Dougherty succeeds Nancy Gwinn, who was the director of Smithsonian Libraries from 1997 to 2019, and Tammy Peters, who was the interim director of Smithsonian Institution Archives after the retirement of Anne Van Camp in 2018. Scott Miller, the Smithsonian’s Chief Scientist, has served as the interim director of Smithsonian Libraries and Archives since 2020.
Smithsonian Libraries merged with Smithsonian Institution Archives in 2020.