Showing Names: 1 - 2 of 2
Name records describe the people, families, and organizations that create archival materials. In Archives at Rutgers, users can view name records to see all of the collections created by a person, family, or organization. Name records are shared across all libraries and repositories at Rutgers, and staff choose them from controlled lists, including the Library of Congress.
Filtered By
- Subject: Lists X
Filter Results
Additional filters
- Subject
- Abuse 1
- Account books 1
- African American Women 1
- Animals 1
- Archives 1
- Art 1
- Asian Women 1
- Bylaws 1
- Capitalism 1
- Catalogs 1
- Clippings 1
- College Students--New Jersey--New Brunswick 1
- Comic 1
- Confessional/Diary 1
- Constitutions 1
- Debates and debating--New Jersey--New Brunswick. 1
- Ephemera 1
- Fandom 1
- Feminism 1
- First Wave 1
- Fourth Wave 1
- Gentrification 1
- Harassment 1
- History 1
- Humor 1
- Illustration 1
- Inspirational 1
- Intersectionality 1
- LGBTQ 1
- Latinx 1
- Lists 1
- Literature--Societies, etc. 1
- Marxism 1
- Masculinity 1
- Membership lists. 1
- Misogyny 1
- Motherhood/Family 1
- Music 1
- Oratory--New Jersey--New Brunswick 1
- Politics 1
- Pop Culture 1
- Punk 1
- Racism 1
- Receipts. 1
- Relationships 1
- Reports. 1
- Reviews 1
- Risograph 1
- Science 1
- Science Fiction 1
- Second Wave 1
- Self Care 1
- Speeches. 1
- Sports 1
- Stereotypes 1
- Technology 1
- Third Wave 1
- Universities and Colleges--History--New Jersey. 1
- Universities and Colleges--Societies--New Jersey. 1
- Video Games 1
- Violence 1
- Witty 1
- Young Men--New Jersey--New Brunswick. 1
- Zines 1 ∧ less
The New Jersey Regional Zine Collection is composed of various zines, buttons, and stickers made by New Jerseyans and individuals in the tristate area from 2011-present. The collection attempts to document the resurgence and content of alternative media in Do-It-Yourself communities, minority communities, artistic communities, and feminist communities. The collection continues to grow through donations and purchases.
Records of the Philoclean Society of Rutgers College, founded on December 8, 1825, the second of two college literary societies established in the nineteenth century.